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Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-07-12

Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1848-07-12 page 1

w Hi JQj KLY 0 10 cirri a k3l r! E JOURNA U, VOLUME XXXVIII. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1848. NUMBER 45. I'L'ULISIII'.I) KVKIIY WKDNMDAY MUKNINO BY THRALL & REED. JIBcoin th. Journal UuiMinjl, aoutli ul Comoro' High atrnHtmid Suu;ar alloy. WM. B. THRAI.LANI)llKNRV KEEP, EluToin. T E K M 8 : Thuee Dorr. Ana pan AHNim.which maybatliaenarijed by the psyuinat of Two Dnl.l.Aii. in atlvnco,iiiiilfroii of p'uitMan.or of por c.iitajie to Ak'i"" or (-'olldr.tnrt. Tin. Journal i alo )ulilihon Dally nnii Tri-Weokly da rinf tho yoar j Daily,.oranuuui,S7 Tri-VVoukly, i'-. MONDAY EVENING, JULY 3, 1818. The CnmpuiBiicr Hodiictton lu Prico Sond on the Subacribors. Tlio early nuinln'rs of our campaign paper being exhausted we are not able to furniali tlicin to our new uliacriberi. We rcgrut thil, nnd auppoied tliol we had guarded against it, but tho demand haa been good, end U growing better. The Inat mail brought ui ninety iiamea of new aubacribera, and intimation of mure on t!m way. From and after this date, the Campaigner will bo furnished to cluba with one address, at till centa for each subscriber. Doiiirs on the Fourth. Tho prnparalioiia for to-morrow's doinga, ao far as we have been ablu to learn them, are aa follower POLITICAL. 1. Tin VVmo CouTr CoavaKTion ia called at tho Court llouae in tbia City, at 10 o'clock, A. M. Tho object ia to nominate candidate fur the Legislature, ud for I'roaeouling Attorney, County Cominiaiionor, and l'oor llnuae Director. tt. MAaa iMhetiko of Wmai at 1 o'clock, P. M.s at which aeveral diatinguiahed speakers, including the Hon. Thomaa Ewing and Henry gunbery, Esq., will Address tho aaaembly. aociKTirs. ' Ciiibhatiosof the Siua or Teupikahci. Procession of tho different Umaiuns forun on High atreot at 10, A. M., and proceeds to Stewart'. Oriue. K crciaea to conaiat of prayer by Rev. Mr. Hitchcock addroaa by Samuel Oallowuy, Kiq., beuoJiction by Rev. Mr. Fiuley. amiibf. w ksts. Barbuh'b Tiiaveliiio Km lOiTlon. Open at 10 o'clock, A. M , and fj o'clock, P. M. Uallook AacEnaioN, from the State llouae yard, at 0 o'clock, P. M. FAIIirlELO Coustv. Tho Lmcaater Qmettt aaya the Locofucoa of ('airfield endeavored to get up ano ther meeting on Monday evening. The erwod wn. ad dressed by Mr. Marahal Rouehtboh. The Gaxelte iaya tho audience might have been confined in the jury boE, and the apeaker to the witneaa aland but the Editor auggeata that it would not have been prudent for him to have been placed under oath ! Whig Nomhmtion The Whigaof Morgan co. havu nominated Samuel Aiiamb for a Beat in the neat Legislature and a whole county ticket, said to be composed of the right materials throughout. It only remains for them now to mike. Ihiir eleetioniure and from the character of the Whigs of Morgan, who have been tried as by fire, we have no scruples- about their doing their wltute dtitij. ' New LIbou Fnllrullum. William E. Ruaaell, Kiel , haa taken the editorial charge of this paper and iainfuaing into it a full share of animation and Whig vigor. If the Palladium, un. tier his direction, doca not make an impreaaion on the hitherto impregnable rntnparta of LocofocoiBill in Columbiana, we are mistaken. By the way, what km become of Hie two lout dele-gates from Columbiana to the Donkey Convention ? The Statesman received ;ier teJegrafk, a bill of lading announcing ten delegalca; and the ollicial tipoH recognizes only eight. The Slat an doggedly refit. sea to give any explanation. Haathero been anyoic play by the Statesman in lliia regard ? GnKLitviLLK Patiuot. Tins was anolher of the Whig papera in Ohio, whoao heaitancy in reaponding to the nomination of lien. Taylor aiforded tho Slatea-man some alluviation ol its Buffering, in view of departing " honors and emoluments." The ink was not dry upon the Statesman which chuckled forth its joy over the doubting Whiga, ere tho Vntrittt makes its appearance with the Whig (lag fully displayed, on whioh ia inscribed the namoa of Tavlok and Kill-xoke. , The Slateaman'i lilt was originally arnall and is daily becoming "beautifully leia." Gem. Tavi-or's Letters. Tho Statesman ia publishing Gen. Taylor's letters in a pamphlet form. We are glad of it; for our friends who have taken from us every copy that we had, and wanted more, will be able to aupply llioinaelvos. The small amount of petty balderdaah in which the li tters are encloaed, although they will givo the whole alhir a dirty appearance, will do no harm to anybody. The prico ia low, only l per hundred; and wo ahall purchaae from the Statesman, instead of printing them ourselves, aa we intended. As an olfaot, we will furnish the Statesman with an equal number of copies of .Mr. Van Daren's vory able and eoncluaive letter to the Utica Convention, which we publiahed on Saturday. llorruwed fL'niiitnl. Tho Ohio Statesman established itaelf in bnaincaa on Saturday last, on tho following document, which it declared to be a letter from Millard Filliuoro to the Chicago Convention : ii T.iJAm CKirairo Cunrtntio : Gents Having busineaa to transact at Saratoga Springs, (a favorite resort lor the transaction tn m-nai) 1 cannot conveniently attend your Convention. JrfVrtiiiMrtMw' yours, MILLARD FILLMORE." The Statesman's oapital being a forged nolr, of the haaeit character, returns to plague its author, and shows how small an amount of even borrowed forgo- rv ia aullicienl to start Locufoco bank of the same kind. Now we can put the Slateaman in poaaeasion ot some real genuine capital some that it can use legitimately, and which it haa a full and undoubted right to make ii.. mntt nf at all times and on all occasions. A few pecillicna will suffice for this time: ' Detroit. May 17, 18-17. Dear 8m i I am obliged to you lor your kind attention in transmuting me on invitation to attend the i ......... ,n rliu-b will mi'i'l ia Chicago in July, t'ir- e,jt.ir, Aoieeecr, rill ( it o my finer to frttixt al liil tins. I am, in dear air, reapccllully , The hearts of the people mint In prepared fur WM laKWlH CASS. u'w miff hi swallow the whole f Mcaico without Win hurt u, it." LK Wirt CASS. LK.VI1 Cai oh Furl TumiTonr. Urirtly ihcn, 1 tin oi(Kttd to ttm i-xtTcno of any jumiliolicm by ConurcM over tliti uilfr." " I d" noi wo in the Cu-iliintmn in grmt Iho reiiuiiilo power to Con- supply iti utmoat demtiud, will, lor deooncy'i ake, pro- vent its reiort to hogut u tho bam "I iw ojiernuonu. und iavo it Hie trouble of borrowing, for it nun bo iiware that" tlioie who trade on borrowed capital ought to break." Locufoco Nominutlons. The Lncofunoa of Porry county have nominated Isaac Larimer for Kopruaentativo in tho next Gene ral Assembly. It does not appear that any pledge was exacted that he should not tain his teat unless a ma- j'jrily of Locos should be elected ; but this may be im plied from the instructions of tho Uonkey Convention.Joim Lriuv received a majority of the votes in Perry for Senator ; but unless Gun. Leidy takes good care, Whitman will carry away the prize in Knit fie Id ; and he should know that theru is an interest west of Fairfield, which, if necessary, will rally for Whitman, for reasons quite obvious, lieing apprised of tht-'se things, it his own business to take care of his own affairs. 1 If Mr Van Huron gets any votes in this region, they must be Whigs, as no know uf no Democrat that will vote for him under tho circumstances, who is re cognized as such." Ohio Statesman. For the humane purpose of furnishing tho editor ot the Statesman with a small amount of information upon a topic in relation to which he appears to be profoundly ignorant, we copy from the Cincinnati Enquirer tho following extract from a letter written by one of its editors now in New York, dated June 24, 1848. 1 mnt yesterday with Judge Tappan of our Stale. He is in better health than 1 have known him for several years. Hois vory strongly opposed to tlio no-mmnliofis at Baltimore, and says ho will co operate with the radical Democracy of New York, or any other Democratic movement that promises to defeat Gen. Cnis." We could givo tho names of several others, five or six of whom are within a stone's throw of the Statesman olli(.o,whoare in precisely the same condition with Judge Tappan; but that wo know that tho public a-lion would expose thorn to an assault of bad language and worse, grammar, and a battery of abuse that would be anything but pleasant. Frrk Soil Coiveitiom m Mabsaciiwsictts. This body convened at Worcester on the JJ-llh ult.,andwas very numerously attended. Hon. Samuel Hoar, of Concord, was appointed President, with several Vice Presidents and Secretaries. Charles Sumner, Lsq., of Huston, was chairman of tho committeo of arrangements, and linn. Stephen C. Philips, of Salem, of tho committeo on resolutions. The meeting was addressed by Prof. Walker, of Oherlin, Ohio, Hon. Stephen C. Philips, of Salem, L. D. Campbell, Kq., of Ohio, and others. Tho resolutions approvo of tho course of John P. Hale, of New Hampshire, compliment J. II. Giddings, of Ohio, and thinks Charles Allen and Henry Wilson of Massachusetts. They declare that Massachusetts goes for freedmn, " free soil and free men, for free lips and a free press, for a free land and a freo world asserts the right of Congress to prohibit slavery in tho Torrilories, recommends the organization of " Free Leagued," applauds the course of the Barnburners in New York, reallirm the anli slavery resolutions of the late Whig Convention of the State, and calls upon Daniel Webster to uphold before tho country the policy of tho free States. "Ohio oives up by tiik Tavlou Mm. Democrats of Ohm, your noble Statu is given up by the Taylor men." Ohio Statesman. Democrats of Ohio ! The editor of tho Ohio Statesman is very much mistaken. You would be very great fools to believe that und'T present circumstances, or under any that are likely toeiiit, anybody but General Taylor can take the Staloof Ohio; tho very sagacious and veracious editor of the Statesman to tho contrary notwithstanding. " Tho time has gone by when Governors, Speakers, and Secretaries had the pnwer of peddling otf tho voles of freeman." Clree. True Democrat. Exactly so. And besides, it is an unbecoming infringement upon the business of the Into editor of the Truo Democrat, who, (or we sro mistaken,) was a few weeks since perambulating the State on this veryerrand. Wm.O. Di'ti.f.h on Ti.t lloitss. The Locofocopa. pers are parading, as a most wonderful literary prodi gy, an essay of the Hon. Win. O. Builer, candidate of the Hunker branch of the Locofoco parly for the Vice Presidency, upon the ctl'eclof tin horns in the neigh borhood of streams of water. The production is in bad doggerel and begins ; " O boatman ! wind thst horn ajinin, For never did tint liriteniNK air I'pon ii hmlient lion mi bear ho wild, to ntt,o tweet a strain!" Now if the air has a mind to go eaves dropping af ter matters of that kind, we hivu nothing to say except to inculcate a query as to tho correctness of its laite ; but whnt kind a bo jo ma tumhrnt bosom is, our eiperiencc in the article gives no information, although we have searched our memory with lighted candles and with an anxiety approaching to a regular discharge of eye-water. But as the essay very luminously con- eludes : "Tears are Bid mrmorr's tscrcd feast, And Ciipiure oft her chosen gueat." So having been taken captive, we give in, request ing all the Cass and Duller men to commit the song to memory and stow it away in their lambent bosoms for consolation next November. trj' The Statesman tells what is not true, when it asserts that we knowing Ihe existence of a letter from Gen Taylor wherein ho refutes to go tho Wilmot Proviso, re I un) to demand or ask for its publication. The luis-staletnunt is wilful, malicious and dirty. We know nothing of the opinions of Gen. Taylor upon that subject except whit appears in his published letters, and wu never pretended we did. "CASS, BUTLKIl AND WKLLKIl are sweep-all before them " Oiio .latts man, Especially We Her, who has swept eleven thousand dollars of the cash of Hamilton county to some place where it is very hard to find. Lkwis Cass un Ikthhhai. NrRovKMr.nTs. Re-tolved that Ihe Constitution does not confer upon the general guvernmcnt the power to commence and carry on a general syslew of internal improvements." l)tmcr,Uic A'atitmtl Contention. I have carefully read Ihe resolutions of ihe Denio-Nf.ii.innl Coiivenlioii. Uvitiir down the platform of our political faith, and t athtre to (Arm as firmly its I ajtprott i'J (Aewi ewrmuHy. y r (inre. Gkk. Cass on mi itTtnit cotmsc if Ki,cTr.. " Go on, and our triumph will be an approval of the n..r. r i.ii nretent administration, and will give di rectum to the ono which shall succeed." Sjutc h mt lltreland. Gun. Cam on Rivv.rs inn Iuubohs audos Si.avi KjrKssiott. " Sir, the noise and confusion which pervades this assembly, willirrccf myfc(iif amnion the iiiiHirtanl topics to which you havu called my alien-Uun."Sittch at lltrrland. Gk. Cass iros Wiiirnso ahi Bkm iku White Mf.n. Be it enacted by the Govanson and Judges of the Territory of Michigan, (hat any Juslico of Ihe Peace on conviction, may sentence any vagrant, lewd, idle r disorderly persons, stubborn servants, common iirtmkAnli. common nnrhl walkers, pilferers, or any persons waiilun or licentious in speech, indecent be-1 havior, common railert or bra lers, sueh as negleot their calling and employment, mis spend what they f urn, and do not provide for themselves or families, to bo whipped, not exrerding trn stripes, or to be delivered over to any constable, to be employed in labor, not exceeding three months, by sueh ctmslabla to be hind out lor the best wiges that can be procured; tho proceeds of which to be applied to the use of the pout of the couniy. Made, adopted and published at Detroit, the Jth day of July, lfIH. ' LKWIS CASS, (lortrnor of the Territory of Michigan. We can furnish the Statesman with any quantity more of the same sort or political capital, whenever it may want, and hope that the ease with which we can Tom Corwiti lu the FieM. Tom Corwin heartily approves of the nomination of Gen. Taylor fur the Presidency, and has declared his intention to take the slump in his favor on the adjournment of Congress. A letter from Washington says: " Mr. Corwin has returned from tho West, in good health and spirits. He is conlident of the sue reus of uur ticket, and is sanguino that Taylor and Fillmore will carry Ohio. He supports our ticket warmly." In connection Willi tins it may noi tie improper ior ns to add, for the gratification of Corwin Wings who do or do not siipprl the nominee, that Mr. Corwin has always been decidedly favorable to the nomination of lien. 1 avoir; tiecause- lo quuo nis own worus no had satisfactory reasons for believing that " General Taylor was opposed lo tho annexation of Texas. " Is opposed to any further extension of our territory at present, and probably for all time to coino. " That allhouuh a slaveholder, ho considers slavery an evil and does not deem it right lo extend or increase it That ho has always deemed the Mexican war impolitic and without justification. And that on all other doctrines of the Whig party, his principles are coincident with ours." These are the opinions entertained by Mr. Corwin concerning the strength of Gen Taylor's attachment to Whig principles; and knowing such lo te the opinions entertained of Gen. Taylor by Mr Corwin, we never doubted for a moment ibat the eloquent Ohioan who steadily pursued the truo Whig track, when thero wero not three men in the Senate who did not desert it would lend tho aid of his vast mind, and his personal and political influence to secure the election of ihe nominees of the Whig National Convention. AH honor, then, to the" Wagon Boy," who never leavea thu true Whig ground. Acnia Torek Light. From the New York Tribune. I The Struggle Before Us Thanks to a kind Providence and the manly straight forwardness of John C. Calhoun, the great question of extension or non-extension uf human slavery under trio tlag ol this Republic is to be pressed lo a decision tiow ! Let who will palter or equivocate, the great Carolinian is alwnys himself is never " less than archangel ruined." Desperate, idolatrous and blind as is his devotion to slavery, we would sooner see him President to-morrow than any Doughface in tho Union. He is no smooth-tongued parasite no oily wriggler between resorts which ho pronounces more and most detestable. He always strikes directly for what lie wants and boldly for alt lie wants, and in this boldness finds the elements of success. The word compromise is never on his lips unless to execrate it; expediency has hardly a place in his vocabulary. He knows no line of IHj" 3D' no dodge behind the inherent power of Territories to legislate for themselves but comes square upto the work, and demands that all territory which has been or may be added to tlio Union shall be made slave Territory, and so declared now! Whatever may be the issue of the struggle, thanks to you, John C. Calhoun ! If we are beaten, the execrations of the free North shall rest not on your head, hut on the heads of her betrayers. Wo had supposed the complaint instanced by Gibbon, of an Orthodox Church in Italy complaining to the Kmperor that it was persecuted by tho erection of an Arian Heretic Church in tho samo city, about the absurdest thing ever uttered, but this remonstrance of tue great nuihlior against tlio inequality ol excluding slavery from the new Turrilury surpasses it. Th'it slaveliolding implies and necessitates inequality ia plain enough ; but that the absence of slavery should create inequality is demonstrable only to a must subtle and wayward intellect. Let us consider it. Human slavery is at deadly feud with the common law, the common sense and the conscience of .nan-kind: nobody pretends to justify it hut those who share in its gains and its guilt, snd tho belter part even of lliese sincerely Oeplure its existence and acquiesce in it because they can see no practical way uf getting rid of it. God, man, nature religion, law, reason all are against it. The veiy Doughfaces who will justify anything for a consideration, do not pretend to justify the enslavement of one man by another. The Judges of the most ultra slaveholding States, themselves fanatical slaveholders, havo repea'.edly declared that slavery is a creature ol positive municipal law, ami can bo held valid no farther than such law extends. The slaveholder who permits his chattel to accompany him to Europe cannot reclaim him though he voluntarily return to Charleston or Now Orleans a breath of free air legally inhaled, has expelled every taint of slavery from his blood. And yet it is contended by Mr. Calhoun and his followers that the mere extension of our country's rule over an immeiiHo empire whence shive ry had long been legally and peremptorily excluded, translonns thai whole region, as il by uiainn, trom tree to slave territory subjects it to the law ot' slavery, and authorizes alavetiolders to sctilu in any part of it, and there legally compel men, women and children to wear out their lives in the unpaid drudgery ol the cot ton field and sugar mill, unprotected victims of the ra pacity, anger, cruelty, and lust of the whole brood of overseers, liaders, masters relatives, Ac , winch slave ry inevitably engenders. I hat is to say : 1 lie Hug ot the United Stales carries the law of slavery along with it wherever it goes, overriding that of freedom which had previously prevailed. Tina is Mr. ( 'alhouu's doctrine ; and we rejoice that Congress and tho country are now called to adopt and sanction or reject and de molish it. i.i'i us see whether those who should he chimpions uf liberty are equally ready for the con test 1 Of course Mr. Calhoun condemns tho Jellersomari Ordinance of 177, the Mi.isouri Compromise of Ir'-ii), and the feeble and unavailing restriction on slavery in Texas incorporated in the annexation joint resolutions. ihe whole history ot thu country must lie read back ward to make itconlonn to llic new basis ol the slavery propaganda. But it is against the immortal preamble to ihe Declaration of Independence dial his batteries arc mainly directed. That preamble stands, and will stand as long at the world, a lofty and radiant beacon whereby the oppressed of every clime read their rights nud tho oppnssors their doom. " We hold these truths lo ho self-evident, tltut all men are created equal lhat thoy are endowed by their Creator with certain inalieuible rights, among wtiich are life, hber ty and the pursuit of happiness "there ia the talisman that shall yet break every yoke and shiver every collier to fragments. Unless Adams, Jell'erson, linn-cock and their compatriot sijrncrj are proved knaves or ninnies, it ia impossible lhat slavery should be justified.Just lest this claim set up by Mr. Calhoun by familiar example : suppose Smith Carolina and half a dozen oilier States if you please, were to legalize polygamy, or had done so a century ago: none of us would have any right to interfere with it politically, so long as they kept it to themselves. But a new region n added to the Union, and now Carolina contends that, by the mere fact of addition, and in defiance of the ttiudameniai laws existing in the territory when we acquired it. I'oylgamy is legalized throughout its ex tent; tor any Carolinian must tie authouzed to take his dozen wives with him nii'l settle there, or marry so manv after ho grts there, else there will be innant- ii; in the bem-his ot acquisition. Who believes that such loffic would claim a moment's patient regard.' And why should it in Ihe mailer of slavery f We rejoice that this question has come up on a ease so extreme as thai of Oregon, nnd lhat New York has at last found utterance in the Senate Ihrough the lips ot Mt. Dix. 1 he vote ol this Senator tor Ihe an nexation of Texas, his unexiieded silence throuL'hout the session, and his lameness under such provocations as those of the hangman Foote, have induced a very general leeimgo) disappointment, which a httle more would have ripened into disgusl and detestation. Mr. Dix has spoken not a moment too soon, but we believe he has at length spoken wisely and manfully. I His speech will be read With deep interest throughout the State, and we have no deubi it will retrieve his reputation. We doubt not that Messrs. Webster, Corwin, Davis, Ndes, Hamlin and other known champions of free soil will make themselves heard Info re the contest is decided, if not on the Oregon bill the passage of which, with the restriction in full vigor, we trust is not doubtful bu on the bills to organize Territorial Governments in New Mexico and California. Very gladly would wo chronicle a speedy adjournment of Congress, but not if the slavery propagandists have thrown down !h glove and insist on a prompt and thorough discussion and disposition of the iiuestion which divides us. II they are ready lor the inevitable struggle, let no retreat he beaten by the champions of universal freedom. The people are looking un. The Army The following joint resolution of Congress, in refer ence to the returning army from Mexico, is now a law : Joint Resolution in relation to the transportation and discharge of Ihe military forces ol the United Status at the close of the war with Mexico. Iti-solrrti bu the Senat and house of Hrprrsentatirrg of the Vaitrd Stahs of .imtnra in L'ongrrssasstmblrd, That, on th restoration of Peaen with .Mexico, by a Treaty of Peace duly ratified and proclaimed, all the military forces of the United Slates, whether Volunteers, Regulars, or the Marine Corps, who by law, or tho terms of their engagement, are to he discharged at the close of the war, shall, under the directum of the President of the United States, be transported or marched with the least practicable delay, to such posts or places in the United States as may Ik leastexpensivn and most convenient to the troops, aim at such piares they shall bo discharged from the service of tho United States; and that until they shall respectively reach such places and be discharged, the otticers and men shall be considered, paid, and treated as io the svervicc of the United States, in the same manner as if tho war had notclosed. KOIIT C. WIMTIIUOP, Speaker of the House of Hrprrsmtatirii, G. M. DALLAS, Vies President of the t nttrd States and President of th Senutt. Anproved, June lti, 1HI8. JAMF.S K. POLK. A Goon 'Un A good story is told by tho correspondent of the New York Herald, ol Bdl Allen, when al Philadelphia, a short time since. It appears that " when on uoinl the boat, and about lo leave the ciiy, Gen. Cass being fatigued, requested Senator Allen to return his acknowledgments to the crowd which had accompanied him to the wlurf, Mr. Allen ascended the deck and commenced. Tho captain of a steam boat, which had come in loaded with Whig dele nates, undertook to drown his voice hv letting oil' steam, Allen s voice raised and so did tho noise ot the steam pipf, and thus they had it, whistle steamboat, scream Allen; but the sloUonan lunjrs of the latter prevsil-ed, and far above tho noise of the steamboat was heard the trumpet-tuned voice of the tall Senator The captain gave it up swearing that it was the first time his boat was ever beat. Tnlk no mow of the bull that was butted otf the bridge by a locomotive, when a western Democrat ean talk down steamboat !" Too Gom to aa Lost A friend has placed in our hands a cody uf the Burlington Fruu Press containing llic following : ' But Sihs we won't trouble vou. You am rinht without Ilia W !' Tho above is the chorus of a capital political anng that was sung in I H 14, mid the nraiueas and justness ol the compliment lo the late distinguished Mr. Wnght, doubtless gave it no inconsiderable e licet in that famous campaign Now we don't very often trouble ourselves to hunt up good things for our opponents ; but tho old Hunkers are in such straightened circumstances in consequence of the nien defection of the Barnburners in New York, among whom Mr. Wright was so great a favorite, that we hav nt the heart to resist suggesling to them a point of remarkuhUrfsrm binnce between him and Mr. t '., their candidate for President. The point is thai both their names are ngaf trilAonr thr first httrrn coincidence so extraordinary that we are quite cerlain that it will inspire the hearts f our Hunker Iriemis with rcnmvca commence, wmie it will tend to strike us poor Whigs with dismay I But we can t help it. We believe in looking at things they are, and even if wn desired it, we have no hope that so striking a similarity lietween tho nane-s of Wright and I ass could long escape the penetration o our opponents, The sentinel is entirely al liberty to mane any use ol our discovery it pleases, and we trust its imaginative editor will weave a lure song lor the campaign logive currency to the fortunate concurrence. The chorus might be : " Hut Lewis, sll th folks airren, You're ntihl, my Isd, without tlio C 1" The longest day in Great Bri'ain is V hours nnd IV. minutes longer than our longest day in the U. States ; and Ihe shortest day in the United Slates is one hour and fifty mit.ules longer than the shortest day in Great i Britain. Hough nnd Heady Club ia Cuuul Dover. At an adjourned meetinir of tho Whurs of Canal Do ver, held on the yiith inst., at Hough and Ready Hall, the committee previously appointed for that purpose, submitted the following Constitution for thu government of the Rough and Ready Club, winch was accepted and unatiimuunly adopted : CONSTITUTION Of the Hough and Htndu Club of Canal Dover. Ait r. 1. This association shall be called the Rough and Ready Club of Canal Dover, Ohio. Aht. a. The object of the Club shall be the use of all fair and honorable means to secure tin election of Gen. Jiaehary Taylor, Millard Fillmuro and Seabury Ford. Akt. 3. The officers of the Club shall bo a Presi dent, three Vice Presidents, a Secretary, and a Treasurerall of whom shall be elected by the. members of the t-iuii. Akt. 4. It shall be the duty of the President to preside at all meetings of the Club, maintain order and perform alt other duties implied in thu nature of his ollice. Aht. 5. It shall he the duty of the senior Vice Pre sident, in the absence of the President, to perforin all the outiea ol tho .'resident. Akt. (j. It shall be the duly of the Secretary to keep a true record of tho proceedings of the Club, which he shall enter in a book provided for that purpose, and report thu same for publication when order ed by the Club. Akt. 7. Il shall bo tho duty of the Treasurer to ro ceive and keep all the funds of tho Club and pay out tlio same when ordered by the Club, fle shall, whenever called upon, givo a full and complete report of the receqxs and disbursements. Abt. H. Kach person favorable to the election of Gen. Zaclmry Taylor for ('resident, and Millard Fillmore for Vice l'residenl of the United Slates, niny be come a me miter of this Club by subscribing his namo to this Constitution, On motion of John Hildt, Jr., the Constitution was opened for receiving signatures, whereupon seventy names wero attached. On motion of N- Hayden an election for permanent officers was held, which resulted as follows : For I'rrsidrntH. Todd. For Vice Presidents C DcarcorfT, 1st; W. Warner, Ud ; John Hildt, Sr., .hi. Fur Srcrrturijii B. Brashearj and Fur Treasurer ). M. Misner. John J. Burress, from the committee to procure subscriptions to the Columbus "Campaigner," reported that fifty names were subscribed. On uiutiou of Welty, tho committee was continued.On motion of John Hildt, Jr., a committee of two was appointed to procure a speaker at the next meet, ing of the Club. N. Ilnydun and J. J. Buries, were appointed said committee. The Rough and Ready Glee Club was called, and with much applause gave one of their best songs, after which John Hildt, Jr., took the stand, and in an effective speech portrayed the paramount claims of Gene-rul Taylor to the Presidency. On motion of B. B Brasbear, the thanks of the Club wero respectfully tendered to oar townsman, W. II. Walton, through whose kindness and urbanity the use ol this Hall wns (rrauled. On motion of N. Hayden, the proceedings of th;s meeting were ordrred lo be published in thu Columbus 'Campaigner," and Tuscarawas Advocate. Ou motion, thu Club adjourned lo meet on Saturday evening, July 1st WRIGHT WARNER, Ch'n. 0. B. Biusiikaii, Secretary. Senator Allen's Speech. Tim New York Herald contains an account of the speech of Senator Allen in Albany. It is characteris tic ot the man. The meeting was held in the Park, but Mr Allen repaired to the Capitol, unwilling lo speak ih the open air. But the people insisted that tie should come "out- side. hereupon he ordered the table placed in the iloor, and proclaimed in the same voice that "beat tho mcamhuat,'' 11 1 will addicts yuu from thero if 1 can ; if I cannot, will die trying. ' He said federalism was the "monster ot iniquity, which arose, in the person of Alexander Hamilton, in the Convention which formed Ihf Constitution; that Hamilton "dul not believe that the people could be rendered sullicienlly intelligent to be intrusted with the sole and unbridled p'wer of lav making ; he therefore openly declared that the rich and well born possessed the exclusive right lo make laws and impose them upon the masses of the pool and needy." And thil (he siid) was the doptrine of the Whig party ! ! While Jefferson thought otherwisr, and thu Democratic parly" agreed with Ji HWsua. Such wilful i,i I e hoods such contemptible dema-goguejsm, distinguished the atiarrhmts of " Ihe Ueign of Terror," is indulged in by lhat Parisian agitator, Ledru Rollm, and imitated by lhat demagogue " Senator Allen." In the midst of his declamation, he was repeatedly questioned 11 What about the Ordinance of 1?!7 ah !" to which he made no reply. When he first mentioned Mr. Clay, " ho was suddenly interruplel by cheers of enthusiasm, winchrest-milled a sharp clap of thunder " And when silence succeeded, " Ohio's tall Senator," raising his arms and upturning his face, gave stentorian iilterance to tho lolluwing invocation ; " Is this a Democratic meet-inL'" which was followed by "cheers, hisses, groans and laughter." Order being al length restored, the Senator next ventured the aosertioti that General Thr had no political principles whereupon "cheers Upon cheers was uiveii tor Old Zuck." He finally concluded by eilmrl- iug ihe Democracy of New York to come together to take a last fralernal hug and then rush into the tight, determined to conqueror die. As the dislingiiisued orator descended Iroin the la- i bio. the crowd gave twelve cheers the first three, on mutton, to Cass and Butler the next three iiipillsive- ly for Henry City then three, "conscientiously," for the Wilmot Proviso and lastly, three, cuthusiastical- I ly, for "Old Zack." It is reported that the Lopofnco Hunkers look nothing by their motion," on tins occasion. Cm. (Jnz The Cincinnati Herald (Abolition) sars, that Ihe re- sp'insihllity of Mr. Weller s election (should such sn accident happen) will rest upon the adherents of Tay lor. As nut one ot them, so lar ss we know, proposes to vote for Weller, our perceptions are not sharp enough to see how that responmbibty can rest upon them, unless they are held liable for other people's voice ! Fifteen thousand persons in New York, in HJ, who professed to have A perfect mania against the annexation of Texas, and Slavery, by voting for Birney instead of Clay, caused the election of Polk, the annexation of Texas, the war with Mexico, tho loss of a hundred and fifty millions of dollars, the strengthening of Ihe slavu power, and nvils, present and to come, innumerable ! Now these p -rsons were freemen, and had a right lo do iusl as thev did, if they ihoiii-lit that course best ; bpt the world does and will hold them, and not others, responsible for tho consequences. They may justify themselves to their own satisfaction. Of that we say nothing But intelligent men hootal the idea that the great majority, who voted in anolher way, ire to bo held responsible for their conduct ! So now, a few or many, for some prrtence satisfactory to litems Wcs, may throw away their votes, and by possibility, (it is only possible) elect Mr. Weller. If so, it would be a mockery to talk of holding those who voted against Mr. Weller responsible for that result ! We do not look, however, to any such consequences. Kven one idea people have common senso on some topics. And Ihey, whom the Herald calls independent," are not so very independent, nor so very generous, that they are willing to throw away the pntsperily of their own business, by throwing away thu prosperity of ihe Slate. If they are, let them do it! We have less at stake than most of Ihem, and can ire l along iust aa easy, when the Inst Bank haa been destroyed, ami the public credit is lost, and the judiciary tilled with wild and ultra radicals. Nay, so lar as the amiisemeni i im- nnir ciiihtiiii h, wot should we not bo contented with the cont usion of the elements ? W e rencat airain.lhat a great majority of the people of this State are utterly opposed to Weller, and mi h men and doclnnes as would rome into power with him, If. however, that majority is not united, they may ea- silv brinir such men and such doctrines into power, ( man ami harmony on -vHr opoirs isouroniy wise suit practicable course, to secure sound men and a sound policy in our Slate Government. On. ( Aromrs. The Duty of Northern WhiKs. The New York Tribune, of the l'2i, hss a commu nication addressed to its Editor, from which we make the following extracts. Us spirit is patriotic ; its suggestions worthy of all acceptation ; its statements historical verities. We auk for it an attentive, thoughtful reading. To th Editor of the Tribune : Dean Sik Ik-lieviiiff this is the first time since you have conducted a pubha journal that I have dilfered from you upon any political question, I beg the favor of addressing a few remarks to you and your readers Ihrough your own columns. It is now more than thirty years since I have enjoyed the privilege of voting, and neverduriug that period have I felt called upon lo withhold my votu from a candidate placed in nomination by my political friends; and while I say this, I would not avow a blind devotion to party. While I should not hesitate freely to express my preference of individuals to be submitted to the Con. ventiou, after the nomination is made, it would be pre sumption in mu to set up my indvidual opinion against wiai ot a largo body ot Whigs, representing dim-rent parts of the State or Nation whose duly it had been to scrutinize tho character and aualihcatiuns of candi dates. I should have been hijrhly urn tided if tho late Con vention had presented for the first otlice in Ihe irifl of a iree people, thu name ot adistiriguishd civilian fruiu somo ouo ol the northern or Western States. I have no sympathy with tho military spirit to which both parlies have deemed it necessary in some measure to defer ; but still, as Gen. Taylor is nominated by a Convention representing every Slate in the Union, I need not say to you that submission to the majority of a body to constituted, ia the basis not only of all parly organization, but of all that pertains to our republican system, and that resistance lo such authority will most certainly result in the loss of political friends and in- nuence. After mature reflection, I am satisfied lhat the selection uf Gen Taylor was judicious lhat he is the best man for the country at large, and particularly for the North and West, who could have been selected from the South, and as in his professional career fie has made the Father of his Country his model, so he will bring to Ihejadmiuistratioh of Ihe government the same purity of intention, the same discrimination in relation to men, and the same desire to advance the best interests of his country. ihat he is a sound devoted Whig l know from per fectly reliable sources. Of thu candidate for Vice President I need not speak. The name uf Millard Fillmore is synonymous with all that is upright and honorable in politics, with all that is puro and elevated in patriotism, and enlightened arid national in statesmanship. And now, sir, in conclusion, allow nie to reier you to an example recently set us by the South. It ia welt known to you, and most of your readers, that Gen-Harrison, who received tne nomination at Harrisburg in December, iKW.was hot the favorite of the South. On the contrary, that ho was particularly obnoxious to nuulhern politicians. During the whole of the baltotings upon that occa sion, (eleven I think in number,) neither Gi n. Harri son nor Gen. Scott, who was supported by Northern and Western Whigs, received a single vote South of the I'otomac and Ohio, and when it was announced that Mr. ('lay, fur whom the South had presented an unbroken Ironi, was delealed, such a scene ot disappointment and sorrow I never witnessed. And yet, what was ihe course of our Southern brethren upon thai occasion f A Southern Delegate rises and moves that the nomination be unanimous, and it prevails. Kvcry Whig pfiif-r at the South promptly places the name of our candidate nt the head of its columns, and advocates his claims with a signal c fleet. Southern orators canvass their own and other Stales with a tide lily and zeal not surp'i-icd and the result : Mary laud, overshadowed by Government patronage and power, but nobly spurning both, gives to the ticket a majority lar,:cr th.in al any previous election for fifteen years, Kentucky sends up her majority of !2."i,U(i) double the iiumoer she has ever given to her own la- vorite son. North Carolms, slow but sure, reports a majority of liUKKJ; Tennessee, the home of J ink son and Polk, I'.'.lrlll.; Georgia, where parties are always nearly balanced, H.DUII; Louisiana, an unparalleled major'ty ; and MoHtssippi, now reprt-sented m the Senile of tho United Spates by an individual who aspires to add to his other honors that of public executioner even MissMsiiipi declares liir tly Hero of the I hames. It hint oj the Jnrth ami tlest! snail this example be tost upon us? trust not. Now AMI AI.WAT A WlllO. BTO V EN TO V FS-STOV ICS 1 YTT. have just received a new lot of Itatlibose's LsrRe Oven Air Tibt Cook Stoves. These stoves, it is ad. mitted by all who have used them, do cooking snd baking as well, if not better, and more of it at one time, than any other stove in thu market. 'Die ovmi will take in eight large pics und do them up brown in almost no time atall. Whoever doubts it let luin trv our, nud if he is not satisfied with it he can rsturn it. Hear those speak who know what they say: ('or.nMBt's, June 2!), lfH8, I have hnd ia use one of Kallibotie 6l Co s Lare Uten AirTiirht Cook Stoves for the Inst nine mouths, and can say that I balmve it hikes less wood, docs cooking snd baking as well an I more of tt than any other stove with which I am acqauiuted. 1. V. POUNDS. CoM'Mnus, Juno 30, IBM. We have In usa Ratlibona & Co s Larue Oven Air Tight Stove, and cheerfully endorse the above HtnUment. A. F. NI'AVMAN, CVKUS GOblr'lU'.Y. Wo have also received a lartr lot of tlioso cheap Premium Cook Stovps, winch wo will sl! as low as llm low(it, L'oppnr and I i runs Kettles of all sites from one to thirty-two gallons, constantly un hand. Job Work in tin. copper, brass and sheet iron punctually attended to, and dtno at the lowest rules. IIKVL & MAWN, !il door north of Armstrong's IJoUl, High st. june30dlwdrwtf. IMA NO iOKTK WKaraidtt reviving a new lot of Piano Korles, from iho manufactories of Thomas Loud, Philsdelobis, Mover. Philndrlntia, Nutins St t'iscbvr, Now York. Please call and examine tha iDfetrurapnts. G. MACHOLD &l UKU. Jun 6, ,-lwdtVw. AD.IIINISTKATOll'N HALK. TIIK personal property belonging to Ilia estate of Adam Itrollicrlin, dece sued, coimist inn of horses, catllo, sheep, bous, wagons, and farininu utensils, a lot of corn, a lot of wilt? at in ihe sheaf, and otber properly, will be sold nt pub lic Ti-mi'ifl nt nis unci rebionce, on tne nun, and at nis larm on the 20th days of July nsit, c oiiunrncitifj at 10 o'clock, A. M. JOl.L bLAKLfc'.S, Adui'r. June 2.1.. .UVw. LOOK if i:ic K. VAMfAHI.K PKOPKKTY KOK Mf.K I have laid off in tlio north part of the city of Columbus, forty or tit'ir lots, which I will dispose of on reasonable terms. Also. several thousand acres of land, and other valu.ililo property. Apply to w in. 1'emiu.oii, Jr., It. r.. mil or tuvsell. April ll..Uvwtl YYiH, ni'.lLi. "rt an da no ui:ight and mfani;ueh7 f'l'MlK imdiirii'jnrd has been appointed deputy seulwr of X Weights and Mo ami res for r rnnkltn county ; and hav-inR received the Staudanls established by law, ho will compare, adjust, nnd km I weights and measures which may bo brought to him for that purpose. Persons encased in buyniK or selling by measurement or wi iuht, not cunforniiiitt to Ihe lemi stmmtirds, are liable to suit if continuing to mte lliMn ii months alter the slandsrds am deposited with tho cosuty. 1, U. POUNDS. juiifs ii. ..un. A CARD. MK. GKO. WII.I.K. oilers his swvices to the l.sdiet snd (ienlleinen of ('obunbin snd vicinity, as a teacher of LaiiKuau'fs, Ancient and Modern. A numlier of years es-penrnct as a tcaclmr of the tircck, Latin, trench, (isriuso ssd Italian lingua gits, enables him to insure satisfaction. If is also, prepared to give instruction on tbe I'isno, A note Iclt at the bookstore of either J. K. Serous, or W bit ing tV Huntini.'ioii, wj receive prompt attention. Me b:u the privilege of referring to Joseph Sullivnrit. Esq., Joha W. Andmwa, li.,('ol. N. II Swavrif, Wni. Sulhvant, fo., Charles Minlwry, Ksrj . Smii'l liallowav, Kmi.. Hev. II. I, f htrhrock. Itcv. II. L. Uichards and k'.. Schutivk. April 4.,4iinil.Vw. FOR HAM! Oil KENT. THK ml mini hi it si mid fur business, corner of Hipb and Itronrl si reels. Iwni'j the corner store in the lluckeve it lock. Il has (wen fur some venrsoccu pi pi I by the nilrt-erilwr as a Stove store and Tin Ware tnnnu factory, stid has sn nxtensire run of custom. It is bvlii'vti tu lie eminlly cliKihie for a heavy Grocery or Dry llnod buiness, nnd not eiciteded by tnv stand in the city. ih to settle up our bosinims, it will either 1m sold or ranted he a Hon tie mails soon,) oil rcnion utile terms. L. Ill .MI'IIKKV ACO (It siml Ulsrcli :iU..rfA.w.'lHl. WOOr. M ANTIiD. C1ASI1 lobe paid for bU.OOU pounds ol Woof, by J II. COW I.I-.S 6i CO.. First Dry Goods Store south of the Market Juno ..diVw. S1IAF.K HPOONSrHutU-r Knivi!7cTonhit sainndt-smhlft article of w hich wo Breselliiit! anv ouaii-tity, jn-t received by II. COWLKS ii CO. April -D..iUVw. NEW STORE. CHEAPEST GOODS EVER SEEN. All bought by the purchaser who buys for A. P. Stoaa & 'os t noiessle Mlabhshment, Oris daar Smith f il I Vt, ..... . tn ii-. undfiraiKiiod re now prepared to aihibitons of the wist se eclut .ina-i, ..r i:i c. .I.- ...... l olliered in tins city, amoiiR which ar ugh cnanisuttbie Polt de Soi Silks. do Hailed do. Do do do UrodeKhinedo. Lupine's Super lllack do KUgnnt Kruoroidered Grenadines. Plain, Blue, Brown and Black do." Fancy and Black Unrnffes. Linen tiinfihains, and Linen Dress Goods. Bishop's Lawn, Plaiu and Pluid. French and Scotch (.inhnms. Jaconets, Swiss nod 'J 'ape Muslios. Oreandy and French Lawns. 2"H) pieces Knglinh, French aod American Calicos. :K( " Summer Pantaloon Stuff's. Wl " Linen and other Summer Coatings, "to Bed Ticking. "UU " Bleached and unbleached Shaetintr and Shirt. ing. f V,in,,n S!"iing, a superior article. Ill 4 Cotton do, 6 B Cottou, for Pillow Slips. A si. lend id assortment of Unres snd Hosier?. Kounh and Kcady Leghora and Florence Bonnets Mitts and (iloves. Msn's and Boy's Leghorn and Palm Hats. AI.HO . Boots, Shoes, Slippers, Hsta, Csps, CofTae, Tea. Suaar. . iiimiir, Hinuiier, iuin, etc., etc., &c.; all of which will be sold as low, nnd a little tower than ever before offered in Col urn bus. STONE & MILLIGAN. P S. I shall nurchnse the eeods lor th nliovn nataMi.h. stent, snd would recommend all my old retail customers to cnll, where they will find as good sn assortment, and at aa lair prices as can be found in the city. jmir-ittw. A, p, STONE. r it. ui- IS opening a rare and elegant assortment in (he fancy Use I and better bnrxains ware never before offered in this mnrt kct. The balance of our stork, infhuhn '..' tfce , is hourly expected. aft t Ws have a naroe abroad for sailing cheap goods t we will hae " more of same sort." Jtiat Received, Paris. Kid, Lisle, Cotton, Ac .Gloves l''renrli Artifirml f'lnurr. (tn..n. tv,.....- u.. dies, Tubs, Onriiuciiluis, 6lc. ' rarHNulH, I'anisolettes snd Shades, elegant and cheap, l.inhroidury JlrU.:rinls. a snleiidid assortment ami grniit variety. niiices, unnps, Buttons and Trimmings, node styles II kinds. ' Iterlin. Zeohvr Worsted's. Can... lDii.Pn. Sll l lllds. ' " ' Chenille Tinsel Chenille. Kmhroidenng snd Flowered do.doidniid Silver Bullion, Kiiibroidenng Braids and Twist, " - -i . i mil j wisi, etc. ivory rnni, elegant ami plain, nnd various sivles. Rihhonn, Laces, tdgings, Inserting, Collar's, Capes. I bread, IWdles. et c. r Combs Shell. Silver, Bulfalo. Horn. lvorv.&.e.. in r..t variety. ;old Pcna, Mnrranted Splendid GoM Pens nH Kreat variety, iroru the very best in market to tl is lowest price sltniiixhl. mostly warranted. iMiioi tooua in all their variety j all No. 1, in quality. Murk this. Also, (.old an'l Silver It.. nil. mmA t. ...J. Gold and Silver Pencils nnd Pens, Silver Thinb.es, Spoons, torks. Butler Knives, Brushes of all kinds. Purses. do. Sus-pemlers, W hidebones ami Milliners' articles, Wallets, But tons of pearl, porcelain, steel, jet, silver, pit. sirate. thread linen, silk, A;c , every kind and it vie. Jewelrv, Cutlery, Msndkercliiels. Cravats, Linens snd jjtQ other s'rticles besides Drv Goo.lf,.(Jiim.RHwsro. Canuia Teas. etc. ' Needle Work ami fancy articles of elegance and tasta, wroiudil by ihe Ladies of a sewing circle. W ho can do less tlmn buv 1 furls, Hi unlets, Fancy Rows, Sosps.Pernjmsry.Cos-raelii-s. lutba Kiiblxir (roods, and an almost endless assortment of usrlul articles so difhcult to obtain. To the Lddica Vou are politely invited to call and eiamine Pans Kid (.loves, Paris Embroideries and French Mowers, Parasols, Ac, a rare silectioa of elewint articles of taste and nobly of French, tnehsh. (iernnii ami Am.- can nianuluctura, not reudily found elsewhere, from 10 to ii t-er cent less than ever befr.re otWd in this cut. Ijook out lor Cheap Iloiiienlic C;ood. 'shortli can t altord tu pay renlof bur houe. and sell imo.l. ,-L. as wa do. c, ft K1N(J ( anion Tea Store, opposite Kxchanga Bank. Apn zt. ,dV v. The Albany Atlas (Locoforo) I litis speaks nf ihe spercll of (it-n. Cass fll Cleveland, in reply to the di-rect (piesiions put lo him about Internal Improvements and llie Oi-slioii nf Stnrtry: 'The Presidential candidate thought that if lie should tattle about the interests of the West or the cause of Freedom, the noise was so frrat lie could not be heard, but that if he ihduljri d in a little i spue egotism, every word tie said would he audible. A discriminating kind of popular deafness. Whether the audience would have been deaf to tbe reply of the ticna-tor rustlers little, so li.njr as be was deaf to their in- lerrngatory. Thu fluctuating hearing of the Senator recalls an olt-lold anecdote. A. addressing B. (an eld tflirer,) requests that he will pay that little bill. 1). Yes, a very line morning indeed." A. Sir, I in-ist on the immediate payment of the account." B o sir, not at nil likely to rain. A. M I am not lalk- njr nf the weather, but nf the money you owe tue." It. Yes sir, verv good crops tins year, never belter." A., dropping his voice, " Mr. It. will yon drink?" II. lcs sir, with pleasure a httle brandy and water. The Baltimore candidate cannot bear when his Mow freemen demand his opinions in regard to the interests of Ihe community and nf humanity, and re plies blindly, that he was seventeen years old when he came out West, and gives statistics from the pop illation table, since then, and tells I be in it is a great country, when a man, who was once only 17 years out, can ne a candidate or the r residency ; but with all this obscurity nf sense, Mr. C is a second " Fine ... r i r-.... , - i l. ..i . rence m lis travelling rarapnrrnniia, and .... , ,c ,..1Jf ,rt wn ii .run. r ui o ...-..iime Ilrnt f Slll,( ol Horse. I be nrocession w ill be ore. T.tc , ITPMtSUN TlfST received the cheapest browi, and blesched Muslin si ever ottered in Ohio. Alna, the cheapest Irish Linens, 1 ickitiirs, and Domestic Go(hIb you can tind. lu the thread and needle and fancy departaient we art) also at home, huving to-day recuivud au addiUon lo our stock m.ikitig it complf-te. Also, chesi.er than ever, Caatnn Teas, new slock, alwnva warranted, itemcmber, wn are sole a-jenta for Central Ohio. i.t uifsreu, io-,iav. received Kihhons Fringes, Victoria ord, ( ollsrs. Gobi snd Silver 11.,) .,) !'..., . i lot of Trimimniis and desirable articles. v anion j en More, opposite F.ichange Bank. JuneH..dArw, c. tt Kiiwn IIOWP, Al CO'M GRFAT UNITED HTATF.fl UIICI H. J EMBRACING by far the larpet Troupe ever onrsnitsd J in the World, consisting nf J.1! Mm snd Horses, and n-ijuirmu It) carriages io convey the performers, music, ate., will pcrlorui at Columbus on Mondny, July nth. This ratnbliihment will be distinmnihcd br Ihe mannifl- the beauty and or an otfer of votes is made in any quarter ' - i CtiKKsr tinv." A correspondent of the Cleveland Herald, writing from the Liberty Convention at Co. luiubus, snva that a delej;nie from Cleveland, ' promised the KesiTV good fur from i' to U0 thousand over all, for a Liberty candidate " The correspondent intimates that Cheese do in " is on its way to ruin, or that its representative is a man of slender veracity, anu cleverly supposei the latter, lie is right. Our anxious friends oil' the deserve niay cool their feara almut Cbeesedom." It will not bo swallowed up so suddenly, either by the Liberty muset the Kinder- uooa jot or the Michigan ir. It has always belonged to the II hig Lion's nni, and this year old Zack wears the inane Huron Hrflectar The Syracuse Democrat (Hunker) irives formal no- ucc mat i,. ii. iieddeid, f.s.i , sn old and wealthy rit urn of that place, baa "joined the Barnburners. Mr. aeuiieiu is a brother ol lleman J. ttedheid, ol Malaria, a member of the Hunker Electoral Ticket. in:i, la this city, on tha 21 instant, Mr. Etmaxh Sell r un Prinrial of the Colutuhus Female Seminary, aged about y years, Mr. Schenck was an accowphslied teacher, and moat estimable man. His place in tha coiunuaity will nt ue easily supplied while his sudden demise carries ulltr desolation to tha domestic circle. HAGH W ANTKI. 'PlIF. snbscribers continue tu pay the Inchest market pri-J. oes fur UagM, in au iiuantiiy. st their bookstore. June I7..dw. L .V W1IU GNU HUM liSG lUN. JOSI A Itt.l.Vt.N KSTATK. TO Pit K ib hi-ivhy givt'u.iltal llm subscriber has beensp- i. a Hinted, Ace. ss administrator on the tsUle uf Josias Kitvi-s, late ol I olumbus, Utuo, decrsrd. June !... ;tww. w. T. MARTIN. MtAl' A S 1 CA N: in.iTM A N 1 F At TOK v7 rPHK so bscr ilwrs hating completed their arrange men Is L for the manufacture nf Simp and ( smile, are now ready to supply their friends and customers with ss good an si lie l m their line as ran I found west of the mountains. Orders for anv s mount promiiilv eieculi d. 'I lis public are rruueilra tu inn their srhi les a trial. Mannfac tory al tin Warehouse of H. Cumstoi-k 4 Co.. heid of th canal. IKiWLLlT CU. Columbus. March lo, ltlt7, .GwA. wtf. ' If wc have disturbances in our own household, so have the Wings. If we have the feuds of the Barnburners and Hunkt-rs to perple us, tho Wlnga hava thodissatisfu-d fricndsof Mr Clay. Ohm is tha volcano of the Wlegs, and New York of the Democrats. We may lose Ilia last, and they will lose the first." Chiioi. The above consoling thought of Ihe editor of Polk'i organ, reminds us of the words of self ronsnlalion and gralulation which ia smd to have gushed from the bps ol a venerable widow lady whose corn crop was very much bbghli-d : " Well, thank Ood," said she, my neighbor's corn is jest in a bad a tlx as mine." Itith mond Palladium. The Whoi i Tumi ' N"T Hun t. The rtii-ton Courier in announcing it ile termination to support the nominee of the Wing Convention, says: " We take the matter as we tind it, ami a comrs to our hand in a very plm shapi. 81ml the Whigs support Ihe Whig candidate or by withholding that support throw all their strength on the side of their op ponents I t his is tne true sinte ot tne matter, and no refinements or sophistications can put it in any other shan that can be plain to the common sense of coin mnn men." Fvery Whig paper in Boston, and nearly every one in Mew Kiiglaud, now displays the iiaiuos of Taylor and Fillmore. m:w goous agaim. NOW arriviiut, and In ing uwnnl. another recruit ol I'nnts, GniL'hauiB. Summer Mulls, ami other seasona ble Goods, whirli with former arntals, constitute an stort mailt not to be uriasaed in this city. Call, old I'nemlsnnd new, ami we wiu keep the uameWi' hae anpnrcn i"r low mu . ami aih i.alisu. ii. tuu i.r.s nr., May .lK.d w, L . F A DI I'.S still ifiiitiiil.enr.iMi.il, we h.ns rrcritwl thin 1-J inorninif bv emrrss. anollirr lot nf Boinct Kiblns, Lvln Thread (iiovvs of every ninthly, sad sundry nthsr sice iiuiifs. i ell tne item emun we nave giovc. mt mrin. iou. of i be same sort. II. ' I.KS At CO, May .U..dA:w. I AIH F.N I We appeal to voitr Mrofriiiindins, know-J Il,.m In 1 m,.t aril a. rrlf. It van s best ipiabtv bronie lsilrs snd half Gaiters, Bus-kins', Mips, sad Ties', both with thu k sod Ihm soles ; just teeeiied frmii i'lnlndtlploB, by II I V l.E.3 Ol LU. Alay 'j, ,uA w. MIL AT It AH. AIM 1 1 Ctialoral Cualnra I 1 l lure hiUer Caslota wrre seoi us liy tne msiiulsci. re rs. which we have so place to keet ithih uhh ner one. we Will sell ll.eiu at prtunljr llie lo niiiln -nrer s price. April .'l.,U W. II. wniii. w u. 1AKAU.1 M'KAW HATS. A splendid assort ment juvt racvitvd by C U. CUVW.t.3 L CO. I Mil. LOW WINDOW 1. in lies wide, for windm June l.l..dw. I.IMr.M. A Rood article i bliiiiln, just rerrived bv It t OWI.I.S A.' CO. IttAI'i: HIlttHM AT rtlttT. A few left, which J will le rinsed out nt coil, ami no nimt.ke June U.,d&w. II. COWl.F.S l CO. ceiled hv two Sjilendid Chariots, built with all tbe gorgeous magnificence ol which modern ait is capable, and al an ei-pemlitur hitherto nneapMlled. In addition lo their Mam moth Company ol Kqocatnana, and Amtnals. the propria torn offer the present season a series of novel ai.d nngmti cent entertainments, surwasing anything ever presented to tne American piuuic. Tho first new feature of thG Magnificent and F.itansiva Company, ia a Troop of iir.iH" i, AtiAiin! Nine in numht-r. wbu.e performance has bean the won der and debulit of all who hne wilnessMd their unsppntach nble ncls. Tlx public may be assured lhat this is no eoiia lerlrit presentment, but the real uucivihied Sons of lite Desert. Tbe names bv which tha members of this astonishing troue air hmmn among ineinseives are Ml ar Aril I lie Mldeleor nvtng .tan. M ali k 1'he Tamer of Wild ilorcs. II a MIT Tbe Man of Good Couuscls. MtlloMr.T Thr Strong. Y.KlHM The leader in deeds of war. Mtimocn The Favorite, At i.t The evcr-emtnrmg. ktvuae The Sorcr-er. The eroat team of Came In will he mansard and driven bv two native Aral ironi me i fieri. M Alio Mi.l Tbe I miner ol 1 amels. A r i ti s The Driver of the great Camel Team, The nctt crind featuin is tbe t.BF.Vr KGYPTIA.N DRAGON CTIARIOT! Drawn hv i real Srrian Camels two ere tbe sat red Albi no or White Camels, the onlv ones ever imiHrtcd. These were procured who grraiuiiuciiiiy.amt at anitumenaa cost, llie mora so a this aperies are deemed the Sacred Camels, the ui tt of Allah Ui tho (roe disnidss of Mahomet i theV are never allowed to be used for burthen or as food, and ia inl mcr before was one allowed In leave tlie ronnlrv. 'I loa Monster ( lianol will convey the full Aew York Brass J(4ii1. auacneo in me rompany. Another sii;hl ot mterrot, whirli will form a narl ol tha pritcraaion. ia the (jueen Mali's Fairy Chariot, drawn bv CO tlimiiiHiive ni'iinnu i nines, nriven uy ine iiwan, mnj. ate vciis, in conveyance oi ten Juvenile i.'iueairisns. Some dcacniiliiin of the acta and sjtonishmir ne ri or min ces ol tliete siranue Aran teo.ie is nert'ssarv in fletail in llie perlormancr nf which is iIwhk Icsjh and double somer sets, among other surprising leats, thev leap over nnraea, I In on l-Ii b 1 1 loons, ami nver canvasses elevated 10 fret biub, spring i uk from solid atone baltmitwtll diachsnte muakcts, eiie dupuers, ami pick up varum other nbjecta while in actual revolution. Also, formiiig 1'yramnls ol' human (inures, Mahomet rammu around the arena in of tlm Arab family on his wein , a wotght of over eleven hundred pounds, and numerous other surprising ti nts vUncli Item their aoV eltv furbid all drarrnitinn. .vir. . it M-..A1I'. the ceiehrnieu town imm rtsuey s Iriirv.LanA Amtnthralre. whi litis won tha soubriquet of tho modern Giiiuahh. A! mi. F.1GIIT LADIKS The Misses Wells, three in miiiilHir; Mrs, Johnson. Mis, Wells. Miss Johnson. La I'etile F.nuestnriie Miss Wells, Danaeuse and F.quvstrrins. Grrat Fuesliianism, by Miss Yi ens. Splendid performance nf the three celebrated diminutive Shetland Comes, via: Hmih and Brad; , Black Hawk, and llo.piionis. W. H. kl'.MI' will prrfurm his frat of wstking on crutch- Mr. G. W. SAHGLANT will appear ia one of his Great Lliiliiieal.lc Acts. ... Mr. C. W. JOHNSON, the great two and lour horse Ri- Miss JOHNSON, .a IVtitr Sprite, is the youngest and aa.,nll.l r..a...la t'.iili-at nan llVMllf. Mr. Mo. and his two sons, William and George, will norlnriit a virietv .if t'n.lurihff Slid t i V IIHISatlCS. oir. ir.ivi( r l anioiinnie m mo untn-'iuiu -,- Mistakes ol a iNijhl. l.tM 'OMOTIVK HAS! This rilnbilfon will Im liyhtetl up as tmht as noonday, bv lite licit of lihl, bv upvxnrds of l.'itl burners. Doors oi tea st .A I M.. and .it n in tlie evening. rer formance to romn.eiictt nt . I'. M . snd 'i in the eienoig. Adliiiitioii, Boies lj cents ( bildrn, under ! years, half price. 11 f The t irand Pnvcraai.m nnd Stectacle eal-ring town nn dava of eiluhilmn. will take place bctwesu Iho hours of It) and II A. M , un day ol prrlrmmice. C. t.UlsHOl.D, Advrrtner Tlie above will ethdot at 'Hoslrr, Tuesday llth. Ash-land, Wcdnradtv I'.'th, Mamfn ld. 1 lniri,.y I Ath. Ml. , non. Friday l.'itli, Newaik. Saturday It.tb of July. I June ...vMUVta, n CAR PETS I CARPETK! V. OSBOIi.N A, ( o., have removed their carpets and luriiishinir soniln to a room fJl l't nn,. .. store devotel exclusively to the sale of carpels and otber articles in that line, and are o'leuiag their spriag stock of H:s imttriai J ply car(et. at Jl ,?0 tn pr yd. Vt pes eatra hue 2 ulv. or niuraiedo at l. -i. t ci m yd. . - . - p.vj.. wi pes itne T. ply, or Ingram do. at flfl lo 75 cts. pr yd. 44) lies wool hi 1 1 us and liuured inur.m An at xi m i.t : pr vd. hi pes cotton legrsin do. at 25 to 3?A els. pr yd. 26 pes Yemtinn strijie ingrsm do at la lo ;I7A cts. pr yd fl pes laiiestrv, hall, snd stair do. at K ri in tflitiA.-.i p pre t loor Oil Clou,,, t, 3, 4, 6 snd 12 feet wide, at 'il tn V l (SI .a.p .) ' Itrst Nei-dle, Uook.aiHl SwiM Curtail Muilins.37, Maad ! r ts. pr vd. Splendid nenlle work Curtains, $5, fl snd Ifl pr pattern. Book and tigurnt Swisa at Itt. Vt, snd ;f7 cu. pr yd. Splendid furrd Morran Damuk Curtain al VI 6(1 pr yd Splendid fiyurrd Morean Del .me do. g'i ami S3 pr yd Bed Oil Drass Muslin, plain and fig'd,i7 to 75 " Blue Biitf - " S7 ioG4 ButT Linen. V inches, 3 jo Wooden Slat Blinds, different breadths. Oil snd Fainted Similes, by pattern or yard. Curtain Loops, Gimpe and Tassels. Damask Clolb. Worsted. Linen. Oil iml rmfl. T.t,i. Spreads. I oiiet and lied Mrrsales Spreads. lll ami 2 Linen Sheelinfr. Binls F.ye, Huckabach arid Jjcotck Toweling. April 10,.d&w;(ei, W M; A McV0 V - L0 n,w receiving their supply V of Sorinif tiooils. consistinir in nart nf Ft.k mn. F.nplisb and AmeneanClotlia and ( 'nssimeres.Frenca, r.ntiusn. .-m-icu, Ainencan and t.inea tiaghains, Lawns. Silks, lUranes, TiBBiies. Lacs and Swiss Canes, Collsrs Are Booiiets.Bitibons, Artificials. Shawln. Gloves. Homer Hifc and Swiss Curiam Mulins, Blue and Bed Buff, Falmlesf, Leghorn and I'anamn Hats, Leather, Groceries, (jneeniwire. ic.all of which will be sold, wholesale or mail, as low aa they can be purchased in tbe west. Those wishing cheap, goods, will bad it to their advantage to call and ei a mi net pnres neiore purcnsaing. niay L.tlotwaiw. CAKPRTM Oil Cloths nnd Wnll Pprr.-W, J A. MeCO t ( O., nre now rrceiviiir a mew .in.nlw nr Carpets. Oil Clothn, Mattings, Wall 1'nper and Window Carta m. (chesp.) tiIV l..dfcwtm. jOLTING CU)fllR. WM. A. MeCOY lTC6. 1) have st all tnm Uie bent anchor Bolting Cloths, cheap Mny l..dwm. r lH. J. MOKKISON. rt ICR and rem deuce on Siuinr nlley, second door (Votn "gu n-f ami uirnctiy opposite ihe Ohio Stat Jnureal (,llir- JuieA..;tniddiw. IIAKi:US PATKNT IMtHMICW GATE. II' is evident this (.ate poises.es man? valuable ipiahties over the Swing (late or anv other w'lnrh mm hi among which we notice Ihe fotl'owinir : 1st. Its self-balaneinff priwiple obviate all dilhYelly of satruing Sd. Its simpli. ciiv of structure renders it caav of ma nu far luring i. ibirahitiiy is Mcured by bearing iU entire weiithtonthe roll-en, ami only in a perpendicular diraclion. 4th. A tram may approach it on either side without backing up to open it. .tli. It slides parallel with the fence whick renders it oetof Ihe way when open. lith. Time and labor saved ia opening and shutting, equals fifty feet travel al each operation. 7th. ....... ........ ,j ... i ii King ana mai wagons wane passing thro' is obtinled. llth. SI. or more is actual!? bbvih! nn urh Gate bv ohvialimi tlie evnense nl irnn hmua and r..t.n.n. ns the a i nrnse nf the nillera will not nceed 2A cts. j bs talea took tbe Ii rat I'remium at the New York Stale Agri r mr, neiu m nuDura, uciuoer, j aiao, several county Premiums. I he Setr-Miutling Wieket (.ate. also, the Fsrm Gste hss been built in front of the Institution for the Blind, wbere they may lie i imported. i ne Biuecriirr nns me ruint tor r rankim enantv, for tbe above Gates, and will sell rights on reasonable terns. Columbus, June h..dwif. JOKL SF.AKLCS. Till: TICK AT Y HATIITKIK indemnity Jor th jnut, and tecMntyJor the Jutwt" amply prot'idrri for, TDK undersinced having purchased of Ira Graver his entire stock of Stovks. oiler Ihem for sale at vr m. ducrd price. To any person willing to purchase the lot, a hlieral d is r mint will be made. Persons who are going to pay rash will do well to rail and look at these Stoves before purchasing elsew here, a they will be sold at a discount of 'Jo nor tent, bebm llieUHual selling rstes, lor Cash. I lit Stoves mar be aeen by calling no Andrew Sites or tliennderaiijtied. JOHN W ALTON, March t. ...dAwCm. Nr.W AK TION nnd (H MISSION IIOI NK, ami Ai.hiu i ti K4t. WaHK-KooM. .'I ke aiiUscriher, kaviag ukeu the Ian; new Smre, on State St., in tbe Font Office buildups, will receive and sell si public or private sale, all or nnv oods thai may bo cnasiueed lo kirn, aed iiHitrrs nunseii tnat ov a juit and nonorahle course he mny rereive a share of public pntrmiatr. He would particularly rnll llic attention of Mnuuinclurere and deale: ia AfricuU turnl and HortiruHursI inipleruents, to this esinblishm!, aa he intends to mike it a gcaeral dpn fur the rrceptine and sate of all arm-Ire ia that line, together with Oanlen, r lower awl l-ieid veds. I be lnre will be ready for the rcreptiDM of koihIs the last week in Marrh. M-m h Il...iUVwtf. JOHN BURR. IV tTICr, 1 have placed my books, notes snd accounts 1 1 in the hand of '1 ms. Sparrow, F.so,., tor collection. All persons indebted to me are mpieited to call and settle with him. June IJ,.-twwNd. I1. SlSSON. pASII paid for Wool, at J June 10.. I. ww, WOOL WANTIUK GWVNNF.S At McMCRPIt'S.

w Hi JQj KLY 0 10 cirri a k3l r! E JOURNA U, VOLUME XXXVIII. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1848. NUMBER 45. I'L'ULISIII'.I) KVKIIY WKDNMDAY MUKNINO BY THRALL & REED. JIBcoin th. Journal UuiMinjl, aoutli ul Comoro' High atrnHtmid Suu;ar alloy. WM. B. THRAI.LANI)llKNRV KEEP, EluToin. T E K M 8 : Thuee Dorr. Ana pan AHNim.which maybatliaenarijed by the psyuinat of Two Dnl.l.Aii. in atlvnco,iiiiilfroii of p'uitMan.or of por c.iitajie to Ak'i"" or (-'olldr.tnrt. Tin. Journal i alo )ulilihon Dally nnii Tri-Weokly da rinf tho yoar j Daily,.oranuuui,S7 Tri-VVoukly, i'-. MONDAY EVENING, JULY 3, 1818. The CnmpuiBiicr Hodiictton lu Prico Sond on the Subacribors. Tlio early nuinln'rs of our campaign paper being exhausted we are not able to furniali tlicin to our new uliacriberi. We rcgrut thil, nnd auppoied tliol we had guarded against it, but tho demand haa been good, end U growing better. The Inat mail brought ui ninety iiamea of new aubacribera, and intimation of mure on t!m way. From and after this date, the Campaigner will bo furnished to cluba with one address, at till centa for each subscriber. Doiiirs on the Fourth. Tho prnparalioiia for to-morrow's doinga, ao far as we have been ablu to learn them, are aa follower POLITICAL. 1. Tin VVmo CouTr CoavaKTion ia called at tho Court llouae in tbia City, at 10 o'clock, A. M. Tho object ia to nominate candidate fur the Legislature, ud for I'roaeouling Attorney, County Cominiaiionor, and l'oor llnuae Director. tt. MAaa iMhetiko of Wmai at 1 o'clock, P. M.s at which aeveral diatinguiahed speakers, including the Hon. Thomaa Ewing and Henry gunbery, Esq., will Address tho aaaembly. aociKTirs. ' Ciiibhatiosof the Siua or Teupikahci. Procession of tho different Umaiuns forun on High atreot at 10, A. M., and proceeds to Stewart'. Oriue. K crciaea to conaiat of prayer by Rev. Mr. Hitchcock addroaa by Samuel Oallowuy, Kiq., beuoJiction by Rev. Mr. Fiuley. amiibf. w ksts. Barbuh'b Tiiaveliiio Km lOiTlon. Open at 10 o'clock, A. M , and fj o'clock, P. M. Uallook AacEnaioN, from the State llouae yard, at 0 o'clock, P. M. FAIIirlELO Coustv. Tho Lmcaater Qmettt aaya the Locofucoa of ('airfield endeavored to get up ano ther meeting on Monday evening. The erwod wn. ad dressed by Mr. Marahal Rouehtboh. The Gaxelte iaya tho audience might have been confined in the jury boE, and the apeaker to the witneaa aland but the Editor auggeata that it would not have been prudent for him to have been placed under oath ! Whig Nomhmtion The Whigaof Morgan co. havu nominated Samuel Aiiamb for a Beat in the neat Legislature and a whole county ticket, said to be composed of the right materials throughout. It only remains for them now to mike. Ihiir eleetioniure and from the character of the Whigs of Morgan, who have been tried as by fire, we have no scruples- about their doing their wltute dtitij. ' New LIbou Fnllrullum. William E. Ruaaell, Kiel , haa taken the editorial charge of this paper and iainfuaing into it a full share of animation and Whig vigor. If the Palladium, un. tier his direction, doca not make an impreaaion on the hitherto impregnable rntnparta of LocofocoiBill in Columbiana, we are mistaken. By the way, what km become of Hie two lout dele-gates from Columbiana to the Donkey Convention ? The Statesman received ;ier teJegrafk, a bill of lading announcing ten delegalca; and the ollicial tipoH recognizes only eight. The Slat an doggedly refit. sea to give any explanation. Haathero been anyoic play by the Statesman in lliia regard ? GnKLitviLLK Patiuot. Tins was anolher of the Whig papera in Ohio, whoao heaitancy in reaponding to the nomination of lien. Taylor aiforded tho Slatea-man some alluviation ol its Buffering, in view of departing " honors and emoluments." The ink was not dry upon the Statesman which chuckled forth its joy over the doubting Whiga, ere tho Vntrittt makes its appearance with the Whig (lag fully displayed, on whioh ia inscribed the namoa of Tavlok and Kill-xoke. , The Slateaman'i lilt was originally arnall and is daily becoming "beautifully leia." Gem. Tavi-or's Letters. Tho Statesman ia publishing Gen. Taylor's letters in a pamphlet form. We are glad of it; for our friends who have taken from us every copy that we had, and wanted more, will be able to aupply llioinaelvos. The small amount of petty balderdaah in which the li tters are encloaed, although they will givo the whole alhir a dirty appearance, will do no harm to anybody. The prico ia low, only l per hundred; and wo ahall purchaae from the Statesman, instead of printing them ourselves, aa we intended. As an olfaot, we will furnish the Statesman with an equal number of copies of .Mr. Van Daren's vory able and eoncluaive letter to the Utica Convention, which we publiahed on Saturday. llorruwed fL'niiitnl. Tho Ohio Statesman established itaelf in bnaincaa on Saturday last, on tho following document, which it declared to be a letter from Millard Filliuoro to the Chicago Convention : ii T.iJAm CKirairo Cunrtntio : Gents Having busineaa to transact at Saratoga Springs, (a favorite resort lor the transaction tn m-nai) 1 cannot conveniently attend your Convention. JrfVrtiiiMrtMw' yours, MILLARD FILLMORE." The Statesman's oapital being a forged nolr, of the haaeit character, returns to plague its author, and shows how small an amount of even borrowed forgo- rv ia aullicienl to start Locufoco bank of the same kind. Now we can put the Slateaman in poaaeasion ot some real genuine capital some that it can use legitimately, and which it haa a full and undoubted right to make ii.. mntt nf at all times and on all occasions. A few pecillicna will suffice for this time: ' Detroit. May 17, 18-17. Dear 8m i I am obliged to you lor your kind attention in transmuting me on invitation to attend the i ......... ,n rliu-b will mi'i'l ia Chicago in July, t'ir- e,jt.ir, Aoieeecr, rill ( it o my finer to frttixt al liil tins. I am, in dear air, reapccllully , The hearts of the people mint In prepared fur WM laKWlH CASS. u'w miff hi swallow the whole f Mcaico without Win hurt u, it." LK Wirt CASS. LK.VI1 Cai oh Furl TumiTonr. Urirtly ihcn, 1 tin oi(Kttd to ttm i-xtTcno of any jumiliolicm by ConurcM over tliti uilfr." " I d" noi wo in the Cu-iliintmn in grmt Iho reiiuiiilo power to Con- supply iti utmoat demtiud, will, lor deooncy'i ake, pro- vent its reiort to hogut u tho bam "I iw ojiernuonu. und iavo it Hie trouble of borrowing, for it nun bo iiware that" tlioie who trade on borrowed capital ought to break." Locufoco Nominutlons. The Lncofunoa of Porry county have nominated Isaac Larimer for Kopruaentativo in tho next Gene ral Assembly. It does not appear that any pledge was exacted that he should not tain his teat unless a ma- j'jrily of Locos should be elected ; but this may be im plied from the instructions of tho Uonkey Convention.Joim Lriuv received a majority of the votes in Perry for Senator ; but unless Gun. Leidy takes good care, Whitman will carry away the prize in Knit fie Id ; and he should know that theru is an interest west of Fairfield, which, if necessary, will rally for Whitman, for reasons quite obvious, lieing apprised of tht-'se things, it his own business to take care of his own affairs. 1 If Mr Van Huron gets any votes in this region, they must be Whigs, as no know uf no Democrat that will vote for him under tho circumstances, who is re cognized as such." Ohio Statesman. For the humane purpose of furnishing tho editor ot the Statesman with a small amount of information upon a topic in relation to which he appears to be profoundly ignorant, we copy from the Cincinnati Enquirer tho following extract from a letter written by one of its editors now in New York, dated June 24, 1848. 1 mnt yesterday with Judge Tappan of our Stale. He is in better health than 1 have known him for several years. Hois vory strongly opposed to tlio no-mmnliofis at Baltimore, and says ho will co operate with the radical Democracy of New York, or any other Democratic movement that promises to defeat Gen. Cnis." We could givo tho names of several others, five or six of whom are within a stone's throw of the Statesman olli(.o,whoare in precisely the same condition with Judge Tappan; but that wo know that tho public a-lion would expose thorn to an assault of bad language and worse, grammar, and a battery of abuse that would be anything but pleasant. Frrk Soil Coiveitiom m Mabsaciiwsictts. This body convened at Worcester on the JJ-llh ult.,andwas very numerously attended. Hon. Samuel Hoar, of Concord, was appointed President, with several Vice Presidents and Secretaries. Charles Sumner, Lsq., of Huston, was chairman of tho committeo of arrangements, and linn. Stephen C. Philips, of Salem, of tho committeo on resolutions. The meeting was addressed by Prof. Walker, of Oherlin, Ohio, Hon. Stephen C. Philips, of Salem, L. D. Campbell, Kq., of Ohio, and others. Tho resolutions approvo of tho course of John P. Hale, of New Hampshire, compliment J. II. Giddings, of Ohio, and thinks Charles Allen and Henry Wilson of Massachusetts. They declare that Massachusetts goes for freedmn, " free soil and free men, for free lips and a free press, for a free land and a freo world asserts the right of Congress to prohibit slavery in tho Torrilories, recommends the organization of " Free Leagued," applauds the course of the Barnburners in New York, reallirm the anli slavery resolutions of the late Whig Convention of the State, and calls upon Daniel Webster to uphold before tho country the policy of tho free States. "Ohio oives up by tiik Tavlou Mm. Democrats of Ohm, your noble Statu is given up by the Taylor men." Ohio Statesman. Democrats of Ohio ! The editor of tho Ohio Statesman is very much mistaken. You would be very great fools to believe that und'T present circumstances, or under any that are likely toeiiit, anybody but General Taylor can take the Staloof Ohio; tho very sagacious and veracious editor of the Statesman to tho contrary notwithstanding. " Tho time has gone by when Governors, Speakers, and Secretaries had the pnwer of peddling otf tho voles of freeman." Clree. True Democrat. Exactly so. And besides, it is an unbecoming infringement upon the business of the Into editor of the Truo Democrat, who, (or we sro mistaken,) was a few weeks since perambulating the State on this veryerrand. Wm.O. Di'ti.f.h on Ti.t lloitss. The Locofocopa. pers are parading, as a most wonderful literary prodi gy, an essay of the Hon. Win. O. Builer, candidate of the Hunker branch of the Locofoco parly for the Vice Presidency, upon the ctl'eclof tin horns in the neigh borhood of streams of water. The production is in bad doggerel and begins ; " O boatman ! wind thst horn ajinin, For never did tint liriteniNK air I'pon ii hmlient lion mi bear ho wild, to ntt,o tweet a strain!" Now if the air has a mind to go eaves dropping af ter matters of that kind, we hivu nothing to say except to inculcate a query as to tho correctness of its laite ; but whnt kind a bo jo ma tumhrnt bosom is, our eiperiencc in the article gives no information, although we have searched our memory with lighted candles and with an anxiety approaching to a regular discharge of eye-water. But as the essay very luminously con- eludes : "Tears are Bid mrmorr's tscrcd feast, And Ciipiure oft her chosen gueat." So having been taken captive, we give in, request ing all the Cass and Duller men to commit the song to memory and stow it away in their lambent bosoms for consolation next November. trj' The Statesman tells what is not true, when it asserts that we knowing Ihe existence of a letter from Gen Taylor wherein ho refutes to go tho Wilmot Proviso, re I un) to demand or ask for its publication. The luis-staletnunt is wilful, malicious and dirty. We know nothing of the opinions of Gen. Taylor upon that subject except whit appears in his published letters, and wu never pretended we did. "CASS, BUTLKIl AND WKLLKIl are sweep-all before them " Oiio .latts man, Especially We Her, who has swept eleven thousand dollars of the cash of Hamilton county to some place where it is very hard to find. Lkwis Cass un Ikthhhai. NrRovKMr.nTs. Re-tolved that Ihe Constitution does not confer upon the general guvernmcnt the power to commence and carry on a general syslew of internal improvements." l)tmcr,Uic A'atitmtl Contention. I have carefully read Ihe resolutions of ihe Denio-Nf.ii.innl Coiivenlioii. Uvitiir down the platform of our political faith, and t athtre to (Arm as firmly its I ajtprott i'J (Aewi ewrmuHy. y r (inre. Gkk. Cass on mi itTtnit cotmsc if Ki,cTr.. " Go on, and our triumph will be an approval of the n..r. r i.ii nretent administration, and will give di rectum to the ono which shall succeed." Sjutc h mt lltreland. Gun. Cam on Rivv.rs inn Iuubohs audos Si.avi KjrKssiott. " Sir, the noise and confusion which pervades this assembly, willirrccf myfc(iif amnion the iiiiHirtanl topics to which you havu called my alien-Uun."Sittch at lltrrland. Gk. Cass iros Wiiirnso ahi Bkm iku White Mf.n. Be it enacted by the Govanson and Judges of the Territory of Michigan, (hat any Juslico of Ihe Peace on conviction, may sentence any vagrant, lewd, idle r disorderly persons, stubborn servants, common iirtmkAnli. common nnrhl walkers, pilferers, or any persons waiilun or licentious in speech, indecent be-1 havior, common railert or bra lers, sueh as negleot their calling and employment, mis spend what they f urn, and do not provide for themselves or families, to bo whipped, not exrerding trn stripes, or to be delivered over to any constable, to be employed in labor, not exceeding three months, by sueh ctmslabla to be hind out lor the best wiges that can be procured; tho proceeds of which to be applied to the use of the pout of the couniy. Made, adopted and published at Detroit, the Jth day of July, lfIH. ' LKWIS CASS, (lortrnor of the Territory of Michigan. We can furnish the Statesman with any quantity more of the same sort or political capital, whenever it may want, and hope that the ease with which we can Tom Corwiti lu the FieM. Tom Corwin heartily approves of the nomination of Gen. Taylor fur the Presidency, and has declared his intention to take the slump in his favor on the adjournment of Congress. A letter from Washington says: " Mr. Corwin has returned from tho West, in good health and spirits. He is conlident of the sue reus of uur ticket, and is sanguino that Taylor and Fillmore will carry Ohio. He supports our ticket warmly." In connection Willi tins it may noi tie improper ior ns to add, for the gratification of Corwin Wings who do or do not siipprl the nominee, that Mr. Corwin has always been decidedly favorable to the nomination of lien. 1 avoir; tiecause- lo quuo nis own worus no had satisfactory reasons for believing that " General Taylor was opposed lo tho annexation of Texas. " Is opposed to any further extension of our territory at present, and probably for all time to coino. " That allhouuh a slaveholder, ho considers slavery an evil and does not deem it right lo extend or increase it That ho has always deemed the Mexican war impolitic and without justification. And that on all other doctrines of the Whig party, his principles are coincident with ours." These are the opinions entertained by Mr. Corwin concerning the strength of Gen Taylor's attachment to Whig principles; and knowing such lo te the opinions entertained of Gen. Taylor by Mr Corwin, we never doubted for a moment ibat the eloquent Ohioan who steadily pursued the truo Whig track, when thero wero not three men in the Senate who did not desert it would lend tho aid of his vast mind, and his personal and political influence to secure the election of ihe nominees of the Whig National Convention. AH honor, then, to the" Wagon Boy," who never leavea thu true Whig ground. Acnia Torek Light. From the New York Tribune. I The Struggle Before Us Thanks to a kind Providence and the manly straight forwardness of John C. Calhoun, the great question of extension or non-extension uf human slavery under trio tlag ol this Republic is to be pressed lo a decision tiow ! Let who will palter or equivocate, the great Carolinian is alwnys himself is never " less than archangel ruined." Desperate, idolatrous and blind as is his devotion to slavery, we would sooner see him President to-morrow than any Doughface in tho Union. He is no smooth-tongued parasite no oily wriggler between resorts which ho pronounces more and most detestable. He always strikes directly for what lie wants and boldly for alt lie wants, and in this boldness finds the elements of success. The word compromise is never on his lips unless to execrate it; expediency has hardly a place in his vocabulary. He knows no line of IHj" 3D' no dodge behind the inherent power of Territories to legislate for themselves but comes square upto the work, and demands that all territory which has been or may be added to tlio Union shall be made slave Territory, and so declared now! Whatever may be the issue of the struggle, thanks to you, John C. Calhoun ! If we are beaten, the execrations of the free North shall rest not on your head, hut on the heads of her betrayers. Wo had supposed the complaint instanced by Gibbon, of an Orthodox Church in Italy complaining to the Kmperor that it was persecuted by tho erection of an Arian Heretic Church in tho samo city, about the absurdest thing ever uttered, but this remonstrance of tue great nuihlior against tlio inequality ol excluding slavery from the new Turrilury surpasses it. Th'it slaveliolding implies and necessitates inequality ia plain enough ; but that the absence of slavery should create inequality is demonstrable only to a must subtle and wayward intellect. Let us consider it. Human slavery is at deadly feud with the common law, the common sense and the conscience of .nan-kind: nobody pretends to justify it hut those who share in its gains and its guilt, snd tho belter part even of lliese sincerely Oeplure its existence and acquiesce in it because they can see no practical way uf getting rid of it. God, man, nature religion, law, reason all are against it. The veiy Doughfaces who will justify anything for a consideration, do not pretend to justify the enslavement of one man by another. The Judges of the most ultra slaveholding States, themselves fanatical slaveholders, havo repea'.edly declared that slavery is a creature ol positive municipal law, ami can bo held valid no farther than such law extends. The slaveholder who permits his chattel to accompany him to Europe cannot reclaim him though he voluntarily return to Charleston or Now Orleans a breath of free air legally inhaled, has expelled every taint of slavery from his blood. And yet it is contended by Mr. Calhoun and his followers that the mere extension of our country's rule over an immeiiHo empire whence shive ry had long been legally and peremptorily excluded, translonns thai whole region, as il by uiainn, trom tree to slave territory subjects it to the law ot' slavery, and authorizes alavetiolders to sctilu in any part of it, and there legally compel men, women and children to wear out their lives in the unpaid drudgery ol the cot ton field and sugar mill, unprotected victims of the ra pacity, anger, cruelty, and lust of the whole brood of overseers, liaders, masters relatives, Ac , winch slave ry inevitably engenders. I hat is to say : 1 lie Hug ot the United Stales carries the law of slavery along with it wherever it goes, overriding that of freedom which had previously prevailed. Tina is Mr. ( 'alhouu's doctrine ; and we rejoice that Congress and tho country are now called to adopt and sanction or reject and de molish it. i.i'i us see whether those who should he chimpions uf liberty are equally ready for the con test 1 Of course Mr. Calhoun condemns tho Jellersomari Ordinance of 177, the Mi.isouri Compromise of Ir'-ii), and the feeble and unavailing restriction on slavery in Texas incorporated in the annexation joint resolutions. ihe whole history ot thu country must lie read back ward to make itconlonn to llic new basis ol the slavery propaganda. But it is against the immortal preamble to ihe Declaration of Independence dial his batteries arc mainly directed. That preamble stands, and will stand as long at the world, a lofty and radiant beacon whereby the oppressed of every clime read their rights nud tho oppnssors their doom. " We hold these truths lo ho self-evident, tltut all men are created equal lhat thoy are endowed by their Creator with certain inalieuible rights, among wtiich are life, hber ty and the pursuit of happiness "there ia the talisman that shall yet break every yoke and shiver every collier to fragments. Unless Adams, Jell'erson, linn-cock and their compatriot sijrncrj are proved knaves or ninnies, it ia impossible lhat slavery should be justified.Just lest this claim set up by Mr. Calhoun by familiar example : suppose Smith Carolina and half a dozen oilier States if you please, were to legalize polygamy, or had done so a century ago: none of us would have any right to interfere with it politically, so long as they kept it to themselves. But a new region n added to the Union, and now Carolina contends that, by the mere fact of addition, and in defiance of the ttiudameniai laws existing in the territory when we acquired it. I'oylgamy is legalized throughout its ex tent; tor any Carolinian must tie authouzed to take his dozen wives with him nii'l settle there, or marry so manv after ho grts there, else there will be innant- ii; in the bem-his ot acquisition. Who believes that such loffic would claim a moment's patient regard.' And why should it in Ihe mailer of slavery f We rejoice that this question has come up on a ease so extreme as thai of Oregon, nnd lhat New York has at last found utterance in the Senate Ihrough the lips ot Mt. Dix. 1 he vote ol this Senator tor Ihe an nexation of Texas, his unexiieded silence throuL'hout the session, and his lameness under such provocations as those of the hangman Foote, have induced a very general leeimgo) disappointment, which a httle more would have ripened into disgusl and detestation. Mr. Dix has spoken not a moment too soon, but we believe he has at length spoken wisely and manfully. I His speech will be read With deep interest throughout the State, and we have no deubi it will retrieve his reputation. We doubt not that Messrs. Webster, Corwin, Davis, Ndes, Hamlin and other known champions of free soil will make themselves heard Info re the contest is decided, if not on the Oregon bill the passage of which, with the restriction in full vigor, we trust is not doubtful bu on the bills to organize Territorial Governments in New Mexico and California. Very gladly would wo chronicle a speedy adjournment of Congress, but not if the slavery propagandists have thrown down !h glove and insist on a prompt and thorough discussion and disposition of the iiuestion which divides us. II they are ready lor the inevitable struggle, let no retreat he beaten by the champions of universal freedom. The people are looking un. The Army The following joint resolution of Congress, in refer ence to the returning army from Mexico, is now a law : Joint Resolution in relation to the transportation and discharge of Ihe military forces ol the United Status at the close of the war with Mexico. Iti-solrrti bu the Senat and house of Hrprrsentatirrg of the Vaitrd Stahs of .imtnra in L'ongrrssasstmblrd, That, on th restoration of Peaen with .Mexico, by a Treaty of Peace duly ratified and proclaimed, all the military forces of the United Slates, whether Volunteers, Regulars, or the Marine Corps, who by law, or tho terms of their engagement, are to he discharged at the close of the war, shall, under the directum of the President of the United States, be transported or marched with the least practicable delay, to such posts or places in the United States as may Ik leastexpensivn and most convenient to the troops, aim at such piares they shall bo discharged from the service of tho United States; and that until they shall respectively reach such places and be discharged, the otticers and men shall be considered, paid, and treated as io the svervicc of the United States, in the same manner as if tho war had notclosed. KOIIT C. WIMTIIUOP, Speaker of the House of Hrprrsmtatirii, G. M. DALLAS, Vies President of the t nttrd States and President of th Senutt. Anproved, June lti, 1HI8. JAMF.S K. POLK. A Goon 'Un A good story is told by tho correspondent of the New York Herald, ol Bdl Allen, when al Philadelphia, a short time since. It appears that " when on uoinl the boat, and about lo leave the ciiy, Gen. Cass being fatigued, requested Senator Allen to return his acknowledgments to the crowd which had accompanied him to the wlurf, Mr. Allen ascended the deck and commenced. Tho captain of a steam boat, which had come in loaded with Whig dele nates, undertook to drown his voice hv letting oil' steam, Allen s voice raised and so did tho noise ot the steam pipf, and thus they had it, whistle steamboat, scream Allen; but the sloUonan lunjrs of the latter prevsil-ed, and far above tho noise of the steamboat was heard the trumpet-tuned voice of the tall Senator The captain gave it up swearing that it was the first time his boat was ever beat. Tnlk no mow of the bull that was butted otf the bridge by a locomotive, when a western Democrat ean talk down steamboat !" Too Gom to aa Lost A friend has placed in our hands a cody uf the Burlington Fruu Press containing llic following : ' But Sihs we won't trouble vou. You am rinht without Ilia W !' Tho above is the chorus of a capital political anng that was sung in I H 14, mid the nraiueas and justness ol the compliment lo the late distinguished Mr. Wnght, doubtless gave it no inconsiderable e licet in that famous campaign Now we don't very often trouble ourselves to hunt up good things for our opponents ; but tho old Hunkers are in such straightened circumstances in consequence of the nien defection of the Barnburners in New York, among whom Mr. Wright was so great a favorite, that we hav nt the heart to resist suggesling to them a point of remarkuhUrfsrm binnce between him and Mr. t '., their candidate for President. The point is thai both their names are ngaf trilAonr thr first httrrn coincidence so extraordinary that we are quite cerlain that it will inspire the hearts f our Hunker Iriemis with rcnmvca commence, wmie it will tend to strike us poor Whigs with dismay I But we can t help it. We believe in looking at things they are, and even if wn desired it, we have no hope that so striking a similarity lietween tho nane-s of Wright and I ass could long escape the penetration o our opponents, The sentinel is entirely al liberty to mane any use ol our discovery it pleases, and we trust its imaginative editor will weave a lure song lor the campaign logive currency to the fortunate concurrence. The chorus might be : " Hut Lewis, sll th folks airren, You're ntihl, my Isd, without tlio C 1" The longest day in Great Bri'ain is V hours nnd IV. minutes longer than our longest day in the U. States ; and Ihe shortest day in the United Slates is one hour and fifty mit.ules longer than the shortest day in Great i Britain. Hough nnd Heady Club ia Cuuul Dover. At an adjourned meetinir of tho Whurs of Canal Do ver, held on the yiith inst., at Hough and Ready Hall, the committee previously appointed for that purpose, submitted the following Constitution for thu government of the Rough and Ready Club, winch was accepted and unatiimuunly adopted : CONSTITUTION Of the Hough and Htndu Club of Canal Dover. Ait r. 1. This association shall be called the Rough and Ready Club of Canal Dover, Ohio. Aht. a. The object of the Club shall be the use of all fair and honorable means to secure tin election of Gen. Jiaehary Taylor, Millard Fillmuro and Seabury Ford. Akt. 3. The officers of the Club shall bo a Presi dent, three Vice Presidents, a Secretary, and a Treasurerall of whom shall be elected by the. members of the t-iuii. Akt. 4. It shall be the duty of the President to preside at all meetings of the Club, maintain order and perform alt other duties implied in thu nature of his ollice. Aht. 5. It shall he the duty of the senior Vice Pre sident, in the absence of the President, to perforin all the outiea ol tho .'resident. Akt. (j. It shall be the duly of the Secretary to keep a true record of tho proceedings of the Club, which he shall enter in a book provided for that purpose, and report thu same for publication when order ed by the Club. Akt. 7. Il shall bo tho duty of the Treasurer to ro ceive and keep all the funds of tho Club and pay out tlio same when ordered by the Club, fle shall, whenever called upon, givo a full and complete report of the receqxs and disbursements. Abt. H. Kach person favorable to the election of Gen. Zaclmry Taylor for ('resident, and Millard Fillmore for Vice l'residenl of the United Slates, niny be come a me miter of this Club by subscribing his namo to this Constitution, On motion of John Hildt, Jr., the Constitution was opened for receiving signatures, whereupon seventy names wero attached. On motion of N- Hayden an election for permanent officers was held, which resulted as follows : For I'rrsidrntH. Todd. For Vice Presidents C DcarcorfT, 1st; W. Warner, Ud ; John Hildt, Sr., .hi. Fur Srcrrturijii B. Brashearj and Fur Treasurer ). M. Misner. John J. Burress, from the committee to procure subscriptions to the Columbus "Campaigner," reported that fifty names were subscribed. On uiutiou of Welty, tho committee was continued.On motion of John Hildt, Jr., a committee of two was appointed to procure a speaker at the next meet, ing of the Club. N. Ilnydun and J. J. Buries, were appointed said committee. The Rough and Ready Glee Club was called, and with much applause gave one of their best songs, after which John Hildt, Jr., took the stand, and in an effective speech portrayed the paramount claims of Gene-rul Taylor to the Presidency. On motion of B. B Brasbear, the thanks of the Club wero respectfully tendered to oar townsman, W. II. Walton, through whose kindness and urbanity the use ol this Hall wns (rrauled. On motion of N. Hayden, the proceedings of th;s meeting were ordrred lo be published in thu Columbus 'Campaigner," and Tuscarawas Advocate. Ou motion, thu Club adjourned lo meet on Saturday evening, July 1st WRIGHT WARNER, Ch'n. 0. B. Biusiikaii, Secretary. Senator Allen's Speech. Tim New York Herald contains an account of the speech of Senator Allen in Albany. It is characteris tic ot the man. The meeting was held in the Park, but Mr Allen repaired to the Capitol, unwilling lo speak ih the open air. But the people insisted that tie should come "out- side. hereupon he ordered the table placed in the iloor, and proclaimed in the same voice that "beat tho mcamhuat,'' 11 1 will addicts yuu from thero if 1 can ; if I cannot, will die trying. ' He said federalism was the "monster ot iniquity, which arose, in the person of Alexander Hamilton, in the Convention which formed Ihf Constitution; that Hamilton "dul not believe that the people could be rendered sullicienlly intelligent to be intrusted with the sole and unbridled p'wer of lav making ; he therefore openly declared that the rich and well born possessed the exclusive right lo make laws and impose them upon the masses of the pool and needy." And thil (he siid) was the doptrine of the Whig party ! ! While Jefferson thought otherwisr, and thu Democratic parly" agreed with Ji HWsua. Such wilful i,i I e hoods such contemptible dema-goguejsm, distinguished the atiarrhmts of " Ihe Ueign of Terror," is indulged in by lhat Parisian agitator, Ledru Rollm, and imitated by lhat demagogue " Senator Allen." In the midst of his declamation, he was repeatedly questioned 11 What about the Ordinance of 1?!7 ah !" to which he made no reply. When he first mentioned Mr. Clay, " ho was suddenly interruplel by cheers of enthusiasm, winchrest-milled a sharp clap of thunder " And when silence succeeded, " Ohio's tall Senator," raising his arms and upturning his face, gave stentorian iilterance to tho lolluwing invocation ; " Is this a Democratic meet-inL'" which was followed by "cheers, hisses, groans and laughter." Order being al length restored, the Senator next ventured the aosertioti that General Thr had no political principles whereupon "cheers Upon cheers was uiveii tor Old Zuck." He finally concluded by eilmrl- iug ihe Democracy of New York to come together to take a last fralernal hug and then rush into the tight, determined to conqueror die. As the dislingiiisued orator descended Iroin the la- i bio. the crowd gave twelve cheers the first three, on mutton, to Cass and Butler the next three iiipillsive- ly for Henry City then three, "conscientiously," for the Wilmot Proviso and lastly, three, cuthusiastical- I ly, for "Old Zack." It is reported that the Lopofnco Hunkers look nothing by their motion," on tins occasion. Cm. (Jnz The Cincinnati Herald (Abolition) sars, that Ihe re- sp'insihllity of Mr. Weller s election (should such sn accident happen) will rest upon the adherents of Tay lor. As nut one ot them, so lar ss we know, proposes to vote for Weller, our perceptions are not sharp enough to see how that responmbibty can rest upon them, unless they are held liable for other people's voice ! Fifteen thousand persons in New York, in HJ, who professed to have A perfect mania against the annexation of Texas, and Slavery, by voting for Birney instead of Clay, caused the election of Polk, the annexation of Texas, the war with Mexico, tho loss of a hundred and fifty millions of dollars, the strengthening of Ihe slavu power, and nvils, present and to come, innumerable ! Now these p -rsons were freemen, and had a right lo do iusl as thev did, if they ihoiii-lit that course best ; bpt the world does and will hold them, and not others, responsible for tho consequences. They may justify themselves to their own satisfaction. Of that we say nothing But intelligent men hootal the idea that the great majority, who voted in anolher way, ire to bo held responsible for their conduct ! So now, a few or many, for some prrtence satisfactory to litems Wcs, may throw away their votes, and by possibility, (it is only possible) elect Mr. Weller. If so, it would be a mockery to talk of holding those who voted against Mr. Weller responsible for that result ! We do not look, however, to any such consequences. Kven one idea people have common senso on some topics. And Ihey, whom the Herald calls independent," are not so very independent, nor so very generous, that they are willing to throw away the pntsperily of their own business, by throwing away thu prosperity of ihe Slate. If they are, let them do it! We have less at stake than most of Ihem, and can ire l along iust aa easy, when the Inst Bank haa been destroyed, ami the public credit is lost, and the judiciary tilled with wild and ultra radicals. Nay, so lar as the amiisemeni i im- nnir ciiihtiiii h, wot should we not bo contented with the cont usion of the elements ? W e rencat airain.lhat a great majority of the people of this State are utterly opposed to Weller, and mi h men and doclnnes as would rome into power with him, If. however, that majority is not united, they may ea- silv brinir such men and such doctrines into power, ( man ami harmony on -vHr opoirs isouroniy wise suit practicable course, to secure sound men and a sound policy in our Slate Government. On. ( Aromrs. The Duty of Northern WhiKs. The New York Tribune, of the l'2i, hss a commu nication addressed to its Editor, from which we make the following extracts. Us spirit is patriotic ; its suggestions worthy of all acceptation ; its statements historical verities. We auk for it an attentive, thoughtful reading. To th Editor of the Tribune : Dean Sik Ik-lieviiiff this is the first time since you have conducted a pubha journal that I have dilfered from you upon any political question, I beg the favor of addressing a few remarks to you and your readers Ihrough your own columns. It is now more than thirty years since I have enjoyed the privilege of voting, and neverduriug that period have I felt called upon lo withhold my votu from a candidate placed in nomination by my political friends; and while I say this, I would not avow a blind devotion to party. While I should not hesitate freely to express my preference of individuals to be submitted to the Con. ventiou, after the nomination is made, it would be pre sumption in mu to set up my indvidual opinion against wiai ot a largo body ot Whigs, representing dim-rent parts of the State or Nation whose duly it had been to scrutinize tho character and aualihcatiuns of candi dates. I should have been hijrhly urn tided if tho late Con vention had presented for the first otlice in Ihe irifl of a iree people, thu name ot adistiriguishd civilian fruiu somo ouo ol the northern or Western States. I have no sympathy with tho military spirit to which both parlies have deemed it necessary in some measure to defer ; but still, as Gen. Taylor is nominated by a Convention representing every Slate in the Union, I need not say to you that submission to the majority of a body to constituted, ia the basis not only of all parly organization, but of all that pertains to our republican system, and that resistance lo such authority will most certainly result in the loss of political friends and in- nuence. After mature reflection, I am satisfied lhat the selection uf Gen Taylor was judicious lhat he is the best man for the country at large, and particularly for the North and West, who could have been selected from the South, and as in his professional career fie has made the Father of his Country his model, so he will bring to Ihejadmiuistratioh of Ihe government the same purity of intention, the same discrimination in relation to men, and the same desire to advance the best interests of his country. ihat he is a sound devoted Whig l know from per fectly reliable sources. Of thu candidate for Vice President I need not speak. The name uf Millard Fillmore is synonymous with all that is upright and honorable in politics, with all that is puro and elevated in patriotism, and enlightened arid national in statesmanship. And now, sir, in conclusion, allow nie to reier you to an example recently set us by the South. It ia welt known to you, and most of your readers, that Gen-Harrison, who received tne nomination at Harrisburg in December, iKW.was hot the favorite of the South. On the contrary, that ho was particularly obnoxious to nuulhern politicians. During the whole of the baltotings upon that occa sion, (eleven I think in number,) neither Gi n. Harri son nor Gen. Scott, who was supported by Northern and Western Whigs, received a single vote South of the I'otomac and Ohio, and when it was announced that Mr. ('lay, fur whom the South had presented an unbroken Ironi, was delealed, such a scene ot disappointment and sorrow I never witnessed. And yet, what was ihe course of our Southern brethren upon thai occasion f A Southern Delegate rises and moves that the nomination be unanimous, and it prevails. Kvcry Whig pfiif-r at the South promptly places the name of our candidate nt the head of its columns, and advocates his claims with a signal c fleet. Southern orators canvass their own and other Stales with a tide lily and zeal not surp'i-icd and the result : Mary laud, overshadowed by Government patronage and power, but nobly spurning both, gives to the ticket a majority lar,:cr th.in al any previous election for fifteen years, Kentucky sends up her majority of !2."i,U(i) double the iiumoer she has ever given to her own la- vorite son. North Carolms, slow but sure, reports a majority of liUKKJ; Tennessee, the home of J ink son and Polk, I'.'.lrlll.; Georgia, where parties are always nearly balanced, H.DUII; Louisiana, an unparalleled major'ty ; and MoHtssippi, now reprt-sented m the Senile of tho United Spates by an individual who aspires to add to his other honors that of public executioner even MissMsiiipi declares liir tly Hero of the I hames. It hint oj the Jnrth ami tlest! snail this example be tost upon us? trust not. Now AMI AI.WAT A WlllO. BTO V EN TO V FS-STOV ICS 1 YTT. have just received a new lot of Itatlibose's LsrRe Oven Air Tibt Cook Stoves. These stoves, it is ad. mitted by all who have used them, do cooking snd baking as well, if not better, and more of it at one time, than any other stove in thu market. 'Die ovmi will take in eight large pics und do them up brown in almost no time atall. Whoever doubts it let luin trv our, nud if he is not satisfied with it he can rsturn it. Hear those speak who know what they say: ('or.nMBt's, June 2!), lfH8, I have hnd ia use one of Kallibotie 6l Co s Lare Uten AirTiirht Cook Stoves for the Inst nine mouths, and can say that I balmve it hikes less wood, docs cooking snd baking as well an I more of tt than any other stove with which I am acqauiuted. 1. V. POUNDS. CoM'Mnus, Juno 30, IBM. We have In usa Ratlibona & Co s Larue Oven Air Tight Stove, and cheerfully endorse the above HtnUment. A. F. NI'AVMAN, CVKUS GOblr'lU'.Y. Wo have also received a lartr lot of tlioso cheap Premium Cook Stovps, winch wo will sl! as low as llm low(it, L'oppnr and I i runs Kettles of all sites from one to thirty-two gallons, constantly un hand. Job Work in tin. copper, brass and sheet iron punctually attended to, and dtno at the lowest rules. IIKVL & MAWN, !il door north of Armstrong's IJoUl, High st. june30dlwdrwtf. IMA NO iOKTK WKaraidtt reviving a new lot of Piano Korles, from iho manufactories of Thomas Loud, Philsdelobis, Mover. Philndrlntia, Nutins St t'iscbvr, Now York. Please call and examine tha iDfetrurapnts. G. MACHOLD &l UKU. Jun 6, ,-lwdtVw. AD.IIINISTKATOll'N HALK. TIIK personal property belonging to Ilia estate of Adam Itrollicrlin, dece sued, coimist inn of horses, catllo, sheep, bous, wagons, and farininu utensils, a lot of corn, a lot of wilt? at in ihe sheaf, and otber properly, will be sold nt pub lic Ti-mi'ifl nt nis unci rebionce, on tne nun, and at nis larm on the 20th days of July nsit, c oiiunrncitifj at 10 o'clock, A. M. JOl.L bLAKLfc'.S, Adui'r. June 2.1.. .UVw. LOOK if i:ic K. VAMfAHI.K PKOPKKTY KOK Mf.K I have laid off in tlio north part of the city of Columbus, forty or tit'ir lots, which I will dispose of on reasonable terms. Also. several thousand acres of land, and other valu.ililo property. Apply to w in. 1'emiu.oii, Jr., It. r.. mil or tuvsell. April ll..Uvwtl YYiH, ni'.lLi. "rt an da no ui:ight and mfani;ueh7 f'l'MlK imdiirii'jnrd has been appointed deputy seulwr of X Weights and Mo ami res for r rnnkltn county ; and hav-inR received the Staudanls established by law, ho will compare, adjust, nnd km I weights and measures which may bo brought to him for that purpose. Persons encased in buyniK or selling by measurement or wi iuht, not cunforniiiitt to Ihe lemi stmmtirds, are liable to suit if continuing to mte lliMn ii months alter the slandsrds am deposited with tho cosuty. 1, U. POUNDS. juiifs ii. ..un. A CARD. MK. GKO. WII.I.K. oilers his swvices to the l.sdiet snd (ienlleinen of ('obunbin snd vicinity, as a teacher of LaiiKuau'fs, Ancient and Modern. A numlier of years es-penrnct as a tcaclmr of the tircck, Latin, trench, (isriuso ssd Italian lingua gits, enables him to insure satisfaction. If is also, prepared to give instruction on tbe I'isno, A note Iclt at the bookstore of either J. K. Serous, or W bit ing tV Huntini.'ioii, wj receive prompt attention. Me b:u the privilege of referring to Joseph Sullivnrit. Esq., Joha W. Andmwa, li.,('ol. N. II Swavrif, Wni. Sulhvant, fo., Charles Minlwry, Ksrj . Smii'l liallowav, Kmi.. Hev. II. I, f htrhrock. Itcv. II. L. Uichards and k'.. Schutivk. April 4.,4iinil.Vw. FOR HAM! Oil KENT. THK ml mini hi it si mid fur business, corner of Hipb and Itronrl si reels. Iwni'j the corner store in the lluckeve it lock. Il has (wen fur some venrsoccu pi pi I by the nilrt-erilwr as a Stove store and Tin Ware tnnnu factory, stid has sn nxtensire run of custom. It is bvlii'vti tu lie eminlly cliKihie for a heavy Grocery or Dry llnod buiness, nnd not eiciteded by tnv stand in the city. ih to settle up our bosinims, it will either 1m sold or ranted he a Hon tie mails soon,) oil rcnion utile terms. L. Ill .MI'IIKKV ACO (It siml Ulsrcli :iU..rfA.w.'lHl. WOOr. M ANTIiD. C1ASI1 lobe paid for bU.OOU pounds ol Woof, by J II. COW I.I-.S 6i CO.. First Dry Goods Store south of the Market Juno ..diVw. S1IAF.K HPOONSrHutU-r Knivi!7cTonhit sainndt-smhlft article of w hich wo Breselliiit! anv ouaii-tity, jn-t received by II. COWLKS ii CO. April -D..iUVw. NEW STORE. CHEAPEST GOODS EVER SEEN. All bought by the purchaser who buys for A. P. Stoaa & 'os t noiessle Mlabhshment, Oris daar Smith f il I Vt, ..... . tn ii-. undfiraiKiiod re now prepared to aihibitons of the wist se eclut .ina-i, ..r i:i c. .I.- ...... l olliered in tins city, amoiiR which ar ugh cnanisuttbie Polt de Soi Silks. do Hailed do. Do do do UrodeKhinedo. Lupine's Super lllack do KUgnnt Kruoroidered Grenadines. Plain, Blue, Brown and Black do." Fancy and Black Unrnffes. Linen tiinfihains, and Linen Dress Goods. Bishop's Lawn, Plaiu and Pluid. French and Scotch (.inhnms. Jaconets, Swiss nod 'J 'ape Muslios. Oreandy and French Lawns. 2"H) pieces Knglinh, French aod American Calicos. :K( " Summer Pantaloon Stuff's. Wl " Linen and other Summer Coatings, "to Bed Ticking. "UU " Bleached and unbleached Shaetintr and Shirt. ing. f V,in,,n S!"iing, a superior article. Ill 4 Cotton do, 6 B Cottou, for Pillow Slips. A si. lend id assortment of Unres snd Hosier?. Kounh and Kcady Leghora and Florence Bonnets Mitts and (iloves. Msn's and Boy's Leghorn and Palm Hats. AI.HO . Boots, Shoes, Slippers, Hsta, Csps, CofTae, Tea. Suaar. . iiimiir, Hinuiier, iuin, etc., etc., &c.; all of which will be sold as low, nnd a little tower than ever before offered in Col urn bus. STONE & MILLIGAN. P S. I shall nurchnse the eeods lor th nliovn nataMi.h. stent, snd would recommend all my old retail customers to cnll, where they will find as good sn assortment, and at aa lair prices as can be found in the city. jmir-ittw. A, p, STONE. r it. ui- IS opening a rare and elegant assortment in (he fancy Use I and better bnrxains ware never before offered in this mnrt kct. The balance of our stork, infhuhn '..' tfce , is hourly expected. aft t Ws have a naroe abroad for sailing cheap goods t we will hae " more of same sort." Jtiat Received, Paris. Kid, Lisle, Cotton, Ac .Gloves l''renrli Artifirml f'lnurr. (tn..n. tv,.....- u.. dies, Tubs, Onriiuciiluis, 6lc. ' rarHNulH, I'anisolettes snd Shades, elegant and cheap, l.inhroidury JlrU.:rinls. a snleiidid assortment ami grniit variety. niiices, unnps, Buttons and Trimmings, node styles II kinds. ' Iterlin. Zeohvr Worsted's. Can... lDii.Pn. Sll l lllds. ' " ' Chenille Tinsel Chenille. Kmhroidenng snd Flowered do.doidniid Silver Bullion, Kiiibroidenng Braids and Twist, " - -i . i mil j wisi, etc. ivory rnni, elegant ami plain, nnd various sivles. Rihhonn, Laces, tdgings, Inserting, Collar's, Capes. I bread, IWdles. et c. r Combs Shell. Silver, Bulfalo. Horn. lvorv.&.e.. in r..t variety. ;old Pcna, Mnrranted Splendid GoM Pens nH Kreat variety, iroru the very best in market to tl is lowest price sltniiixhl. mostly warranted. iMiioi tooua in all their variety j all No. 1, in quality. Murk this. Also, (.old an'l Silver It.. nil. mmA t. ...J. Gold and Silver Pencils nnd Pens, Silver Thinb.es, Spoons, torks. Butler Knives, Brushes of all kinds. Purses. do. Sus-pemlers, W hidebones ami Milliners' articles, Wallets, But tons of pearl, porcelain, steel, jet, silver, pit. sirate. thread linen, silk, A;c , every kind and it vie. Jewelrv, Cutlery, Msndkercliiels. Cravats, Linens snd jjtQ other s'rticles besides Drv Goo.lf,.(Jiim.RHwsro. Canuia Teas. etc. ' Needle Work ami fancy articles of elegance and tasta, wroiudil by ihe Ladies of a sewing circle. W ho can do less tlmn buv 1 furls, Hi unlets, Fancy Rows, Sosps.Pernjmsry.Cos-raelii-s. lutba Kiiblxir (roods, and an almost endless assortment of usrlul articles so difhcult to obtain. To the Lddica Vou are politely invited to call and eiamine Pans Kid (.loves, Paris Embroideries and French Mowers, Parasols, Ac, a rare silectioa of elewint articles of taste and nobly of French, tnehsh. (iernnii ami Am.- can nianuluctura, not reudily found elsewhere, from 10 to ii t-er cent less than ever befr.re otWd in this cut. Ijook out lor Cheap Iloiiienlic C;ood. 'shortli can t altord tu pay renlof bur houe. and sell imo.l. ,-L. as wa do. c, ft K1N(J ( anion Tea Store, opposite Kxchanga Bank. Apn zt. ,dV v. The Albany Atlas (Locoforo) I litis speaks nf ihe spercll of (it-n. Cass fll Cleveland, in reply to the di-rect (piesiions put lo him about Internal Improvements and llie Oi-slioii nf Stnrtry: 'The Presidential candidate thought that if lie should tattle about the interests of the West or the cause of Freedom, the noise was so frrat lie could not be heard, but that if he ihduljri d in a little i spue egotism, every word tie said would he audible. A discriminating kind of popular deafness. Whether the audience would have been deaf to tbe reply of the ticna-tor rustlers little, so li.njr as be was deaf to their in- lerrngatory. Thu fluctuating hearing of the Senator recalls an olt-lold anecdote. A. addressing B. (an eld tflirer,) requests that he will pay that little bill. 1). Yes, a very line morning indeed." A. Sir, I in-ist on the immediate payment of the account." B o sir, not at nil likely to rain. A. M I am not lalk- njr nf the weather, but nf the money you owe tue." It. Yes sir, verv good crops tins year, never belter." A., dropping his voice, " Mr. It. will yon drink?" II. lcs sir, with pleasure a httle brandy and water. The Baltimore candidate cannot bear when his Mow freemen demand his opinions in regard to the interests of Ihe community and nf humanity, and re plies blindly, that he was seventeen years old when he came out West, and gives statistics from the pop illation table, since then, and tells I be in it is a great country, when a man, who was once only 17 years out, can ne a candidate or the r residency ; but with all this obscurity nf sense, Mr. C is a second " Fine ... r i r-.... , - i l. ..i . rence m lis travelling rarapnrrnniia, and .... , ,c ,..1Jf ,rt wn ii .run. r ui o ...-..iime Ilrnt f Slll,( ol Horse. I be nrocession w ill be ore. T.tc , ITPMtSUN TlfST received the cheapest browi, and blesched Muslin si ever ottered in Ohio. Alna, the cheapest Irish Linens, 1 ickitiirs, and Domestic Go(hIb you can tind. lu the thread and needle and fancy departaient we art) also at home, huving to-day recuivud au addiUon lo our stock m.ikitig it complf-te. Also, chesi.er than ever, Caatnn Teas, new slock, alwnva warranted, itemcmber, wn are sole a-jenta for Central Ohio. i.t uifsreu, io-,iav. received Kihhons Fringes, Victoria ord, ( ollsrs. Gobi snd Silver 11.,) .,) !'..., . i lot of Trimimniis and desirable articles. v anion j en More, opposite F.ichange Bank. JuneH..dArw, c. tt Kiiwn IIOWP, Al CO'M GRFAT UNITED HTATF.fl UIICI H. J EMBRACING by far the larpet Troupe ever onrsnitsd J in the World, consisting nf J.1! Mm snd Horses, and n-ijuirmu It) carriages io convey the performers, music, ate., will pcrlorui at Columbus on Mondny, July nth. This ratnbliihment will be distinmnihcd br Ihe mannifl- the beauty and or an otfer of votes is made in any quarter ' - i CtiKKsr tinv." A correspondent of the Cleveland Herald, writing from the Liberty Convention at Co. luiubus, snva that a delej;nie from Cleveland, ' promised the KesiTV good fur from i' to U0 thousand over all, for a Liberty candidate " The correspondent intimates that Cheese do in " is on its way to ruin, or that its representative is a man of slender veracity, anu cleverly supposei the latter, lie is right. Our anxious friends oil' the deserve niay cool their feara almut Cbeesedom." It will not bo swallowed up so suddenly, either by the Liberty muset the Kinder- uooa jot or the Michigan ir. It has always belonged to the II hig Lion's nni, and this year old Zack wears the inane Huron Hrflectar The Syracuse Democrat (Hunker) irives formal no- ucc mat i,. ii. iieddeid, f.s.i , sn old and wealthy rit urn of that place, baa "joined the Barnburners. Mr. aeuiieiu is a brother ol lleman J. ttedheid, ol Malaria, a member of the Hunker Electoral Ticket. in:i, la this city, on tha 21 instant, Mr. Etmaxh Sell r un Prinrial of the Colutuhus Female Seminary, aged about y years, Mr. Schenck was an accowphslied teacher, and moat estimable man. His place in tha coiunuaity will nt ue easily supplied while his sudden demise carries ulltr desolation to tha domestic circle. HAGH W ANTKI. 'PlIF. snbscribers continue tu pay the Inchest market pri-J. oes fur UagM, in au iiuantiiy. st their bookstore. June I7..dw. L .V W1IU GNU HUM liSG lUN. JOSI A Itt.l.Vt.N KSTATK. TO Pit K ib hi-ivhy givt'u.iltal llm subscriber has beensp- i. a Hinted, Ace. ss administrator on the tsUle uf Josias Kitvi-s, late ol I olumbus, Utuo, decrsrd. June !... ;tww. w. T. MARTIN. MtAl' A S 1 CA N: in.iTM A N 1 F At TOK v7 rPHK so bscr ilwrs hating completed their arrange men Is L for the manufacture nf Simp and ( smile, are now ready to supply their friends and customers with ss good an si lie l m their line as ran I found west of the mountains. Orders for anv s mount promiiilv eieculi d. 'I lis public are rruueilra tu inn their srhi les a trial. Mannfac tory al tin Warehouse of H. Cumstoi-k 4 Co.. heid of th canal. IKiWLLlT CU. Columbus. March lo, ltlt7, .GwA. wtf. ' If wc have disturbances in our own household, so have the Wings. If we have the feuds of the Barnburners and Hunkt-rs to perple us, tho Wlnga hava thodissatisfu-d fricndsof Mr Clay. Ohm is tha volcano of the Wlegs, and New York of the Democrats. We may lose Ilia last, and they will lose the first." Chiioi. The above consoling thought of Ihe editor of Polk'i organ, reminds us of the words of self ronsnlalion and gralulation which ia smd to have gushed from the bps ol a venerable widow lady whose corn crop was very much bbghli-d : " Well, thank Ood," said she, my neighbor's corn is jest in a bad a tlx as mine." Itith mond Palladium. The Whoi i Tumi ' N"T Hun t. The rtii-ton Courier in announcing it ile termination to support the nominee of the Wing Convention, says: " We take the matter as we tind it, ami a comrs to our hand in a very plm shapi. 81ml the Whigs support Ihe Whig candidate or by withholding that support throw all their strength on the side of their op ponents I t his is tne true sinte ot tne matter, and no refinements or sophistications can put it in any other shan that can be plain to the common sense of coin mnn men." Fvery Whig paper in Boston, and nearly every one in Mew Kiiglaud, now displays the iiaiuos of Taylor and Fillmore. m:w goous agaim. NOW arriviiut, and In ing uwnnl. another recruit ol I'nnts, GniL'hauiB. Summer Mulls, ami other seasona ble Goods, whirli with former arntals, constitute an stort mailt not to be uriasaed in this city. Call, old I'nemlsnnd new, ami we wiu keep the uameWi' hae anpnrcn i"r low mu . ami aih i.alisu. ii. tuu i.r.s nr., May .lK.d w, L . F A DI I'.S still ifiiitiiil.enr.iMi.il, we h.ns rrcritwl thin 1-J inorninif bv emrrss. anollirr lot nf Boinct Kiblns, Lvln Thread (iiovvs of every ninthly, sad sundry nthsr sice iiuiifs. i ell tne item emun we nave giovc. mt mrin. iou. of i be same sort. II. ' I.KS At CO, May .U..dA:w. I AIH F.N I We appeal to voitr Mrofriiiindins, know-J Il,.m In 1 m,.t aril a. rrlf. It van s best ipiabtv bronie lsilrs snd half Gaiters, Bus-kins', Mips, sad Ties', both with thu k sod Ihm soles ; just teeeiied frmii i'lnlndtlploB, by II I V l.E.3 Ol LU. Alay 'j, ,uA w. MIL AT It AH. AIM 1 1 Ctialoral Cualnra I 1 l lure hiUer Caslota wrre seoi us liy tne msiiulsci. re rs. which we have so place to keet ithih uhh ner one. we Will sell ll.eiu at prtunljr llie lo niiiln -nrer s price. April .'l.,U W. II. wniii. w u. 1AKAU.1 M'KAW HATS. A splendid assort ment juvt racvitvd by C U. CUVW.t.3 L CO. I Mil. LOW WINDOW 1. in lies wide, for windm June l.l..dw. I.IMr.M. A Rood article i bliiiiln, just rerrived bv It t OWI.I.S A.' CO. IttAI'i: HIlttHM AT rtlttT. A few left, which J will le rinsed out nt coil, ami no nimt.ke June U.,d&w. II. COWl.F.S l CO. ceiled hv two Sjilendid Chariots, built with all tbe gorgeous magnificence ol which modern ait is capable, and al an ei-pemlitur hitherto nneapMlled. In addition lo their Mam moth Company ol Kqocatnana, and Amtnals. the propria torn offer the present season a series of novel ai.d nngmti cent entertainments, surwasing anything ever presented to tne American piuuic. Tho first new feature of thG Magnificent and F.itansiva Company, ia a Troop of iir.iH" i, AtiAiin! Nine in numht-r. wbu.e performance has bean the won der and debulit of all who hne wilnessMd their unsppntach nble ncls. Tlx public may be assured lhat this is no eoiia lerlrit presentment, but the real uucivihied Sons of lite Desert. Tbe names bv which tha members of this astonishing troue air hmmn among ineinseives are Ml ar Aril I lie Mldeleor nvtng .tan. M ali k 1'he Tamer of Wild ilorcs. II a MIT Tbe Man of Good Couuscls. MtlloMr.T Thr Strong. Y.KlHM The leader in deeds of war. Mtimocn The Favorite, At i.t The evcr-emtnrmg. ktvuae The Sorcr-er. The eroat team of Came In will he mansard and driven bv two native Aral ironi me i fieri. M Alio Mi.l Tbe I miner ol 1 amels. A r i ti s The Driver of the great Camel Team, The nctt crind featuin is tbe t.BF.Vr KGYPTIA.N DRAGON CTIARIOT! Drawn hv i real Srrian Camels two ere tbe sat red Albi no or White Camels, the onlv ones ever imiHrtcd. These were procured who grraiuiiuciiiiy.amt at anitumenaa cost, llie mora so a this aperies are deemed the Sacred Camels, the ui tt of Allah Ui tho (roe disnidss of Mahomet i theV are never allowed to be used for burthen or as food, and ia inl mcr before was one allowed In leave tlie ronnlrv. 'I loa Monster ( lianol will convey the full Aew York Brass J(4ii1. auacneo in me rompany. Another sii;hl ot mterrot, whirli will form a narl ol tha pritcraaion. ia the (jueen Mali's Fairy Chariot, drawn bv CO tlimiiiHiive ni'iinnu i nines, nriven uy ine iiwan, mnj. ate vciis, in conveyance oi ten Juvenile i.'iueairisns. Some dcacniiliiin of the acta and sjtonishmir ne ri or min ces ol tliete siranue Aran teo.ie is nert'ssarv in fletail in llie perlormancr nf which is iIwhk Icsjh and double somer sets, among other surprising leats, thev leap over nnraea, I In on l-Ii b 1 1 loons, ami nver canvasses elevated 10 fret biub, spring i uk from solid atone baltmitwtll diachsnte muakcts, eiie dupuers, ami pick up varum other nbjecta while in actual revolution. Also, formiiig 1'yramnls ol' human (inures, Mahomet rammu around the arena in of tlm Arab family on his wein , a wotght of over eleven hundred pounds, and numerous other surprising ti nts vUncli Item their aoV eltv furbid all drarrnitinn. .vir. . it M-..A1I'. the ceiehrnieu town imm rtsuey s Iriirv.LanA Amtnthralre. whi litis won tha soubriquet of tho modern Giiiuahh. A! mi. F.1GIIT LADIKS The Misses Wells, three in miiiilHir; Mrs, Johnson. Mis, Wells. Miss Johnson. La I'etile F.nuestnriie Miss Wells, Danaeuse and F.quvstrrins. Grrat Fuesliianism, by Miss Yi ens. Splendid performance nf the three celebrated diminutive Shetland Comes, via: Hmih and Brad; , Black Hawk, and llo.piionis. W. H. kl'.MI' will prrfurm his frat of wstking on crutch- Mr. G. W. SAHGLANT will appear ia one of his Great Lliiliiieal.lc Acts. ... Mr. C. W. JOHNSON, the great two and lour horse Ri- Miss JOHNSON, .a IVtitr Sprite, is the youngest and aa.,nll.l r..a...la t'.iili-at nan llVMllf. Mr. Mo. and his two sons, William and George, will norlnriit a virietv .if t'n.lurihff Slid t i V IIHISatlCS. oir. ir.ivi( r l anioiinnie m mo untn-'iuiu -,- Mistakes ol a iNijhl. l.tM 'OMOTIVK HAS! This rilnbilfon will Im liyhtetl up as tmht as noonday, bv lite licit of lihl, bv upvxnrds of l.'itl burners. Doors oi tea st .A I M.. and .it n in tlie evening. rer formance to romn.eiictt nt . I'. M . snd 'i in the eienoig. Adliiiitioii, Boies lj cents ( bildrn, under ! years, half price. 11 f The t irand Pnvcraai.m nnd Stectacle eal-ring town nn dava of eiluhilmn. will take place bctwesu Iho hours of It) and II A. M , un day ol prrlrmmice. C. t.UlsHOl.D, Advrrtner Tlie above will ethdot at 'Hoslrr, Tuesday llth. Ash-land, Wcdnradtv I'.'th, Mamfn ld. 1 lniri,.y I Ath. Ml. , non. Friday l.'itli, Newaik. Saturday It.tb of July. I June ...vMUVta, n CAR PETS I CARPETK! V. OSBOIi.N A, ( o., have removed their carpets and luriiishinir soniln to a room fJl l't nn,. .. store devotel exclusively to the sale of carpels and otber articles in that line, and are o'leuiag their spriag stock of H:s imttriai J ply car(et. at Jl ,?0 tn pr yd. Vt pes eatra hue 2 ulv. or niuraiedo at l. -i. t ci m yd. . - . - p.vj.. wi pes itne T. ply, or Ingram do. at flfl lo 75 cts. pr yd. 44) lies wool hi 1 1 us and liuured inur.m An at xi m i.t : pr vd. hi pes cotton legrsin do. at 25 to 3?A els. pr yd. 26 pes Yemtinn strijie ingrsm do at la lo ;I7A cts. pr yd fl pes laiiestrv, hall, snd stair do. at K ri in tflitiA.-.i p pre t loor Oil Clou,,, t, 3, 4, 6 snd 12 feet wide, at 'il tn V l (SI .a.p .) ' Itrst Nei-dle, Uook.aiHl SwiM Curtail Muilins.37, Maad ! r ts. pr vd. Splendid nenlle work Curtains, $5, fl snd Ifl pr pattern. Book and tigurnt Swisa at Itt. Vt, snd ;f7 cu. pr yd. Splendid furrd Morran Damuk Curtain al VI 6(1 pr yd Splendid fiyurrd Morean Del .me do. g'i ami S3 pr yd Bed Oil Drass Muslin, plain and fig'd,i7 to 75 " Blue Biitf - " S7 ioG4 ButT Linen. V inches, 3 jo Wooden Slat Blinds, different breadths. Oil snd Fainted Similes, by pattern or yard. Curtain Loops, Gimpe and Tassels. Damask Clolb. Worsted. Linen. Oil iml rmfl. T.t,i. Spreads. I oiiet and lied Mrrsales Spreads. lll ami 2 Linen Sheelinfr. Binls F.ye, Huckabach arid Jjcotck Toweling. April 10,.d&w;(ei, W M; A McV0 V - L0 n,w receiving their supply V of Sorinif tiooils. consistinir in nart nf Ft.k mn. F.nplisb and AmeneanClotlia and ( 'nssimeres.Frenca, r.ntiusn. .-m-icu, Ainencan and t.inea tiaghains, Lawns. Silks, lUranes, TiBBiies. Lacs and Swiss Canes, Collsrs Are Booiiets.Bitibons, Artificials. Shawln. Gloves. Homer Hifc and Swiss Curiam Mulins, Blue and Bed Buff, Falmlesf, Leghorn and I'anamn Hats, Leather, Groceries, (jneeniwire. ic.all of which will be sold, wholesale or mail, as low aa they can be purchased in tbe west. Those wishing cheap, goods, will bad it to their advantage to call and ei a mi net pnres neiore purcnsaing. niay L.tlotwaiw. CAKPRTM Oil Cloths nnd Wnll Pprr.-W, J A. MeCO t ( O., nre now rrceiviiir a mew .in.nlw nr Carpets. Oil Clothn, Mattings, Wall 1'nper and Window Carta m. (chesp.) tiIV l..dfcwtm. jOLTING CU)fllR. WM. A. MeCOY lTC6. 1) have st all tnm Uie bent anchor Bolting Cloths, cheap Mny l..dwm. r lH. J. MOKKISON. rt ICR and rem deuce on Siuinr nlley, second door (Votn "gu n-f ami uirnctiy opposite ihe Ohio Stat Jnureal (,llir- JuieA..;tniddiw. IIAKi:US PATKNT IMtHMICW GATE. II' is evident this (.ate poises.es man? valuable ipiahties over the Swing (late or anv other w'lnrh mm hi among which we notice Ihe fotl'owinir : 1st. Its self-balaneinff priwiple obviate all dilhYelly of satruing Sd. Its simpli. ciiv of structure renders it caav of ma nu far luring i. ibirahitiiy is Mcured by bearing iU entire weiithtonthe roll-en, ami only in a perpendicular diraclion. 4th. A tram may approach it on either side without backing up to open it. .tli. It slides parallel with the fence whick renders it oetof Ihe way when open. lith. Time and labor saved ia opening and shutting, equals fifty feet travel al each operation. 7th. ....... ........ ,j ... i ii King ana mai wagons wane passing thro' is obtinled. llth. SI. or more is actual!? bbvih! nn urh Gate bv ohvialimi tlie evnense nl irnn hmua and r..t.n.n. ns the a i nrnse nf the nillera will not nceed 2A cts. j bs talea took tbe Ii rat I'remium at the New York Stale Agri r mr, neiu m nuDura, uciuoer, j aiao, several county Premiums. I he Setr-Miutling Wieket (.ate. also, the Fsrm Gste hss been built in front of the Institution for the Blind, wbere they may lie i imported. i ne Biuecriirr nns me ruint tor r rankim enantv, for tbe above Gates, and will sell rights on reasonable terns. Columbus, June h..dwif. JOKL SF.AKLCS. Till: TICK AT Y HATIITKIK indemnity Jor th jnut, and tecMntyJor the Jutwt" amply prot'idrri for, TDK undersinced having purchased of Ira Graver his entire stock of Stovks. oiler Ihem for sale at vr m. ducrd price. To any person willing to purchase the lot, a hlieral d is r mint will be made. Persons who are going to pay rash will do well to rail and look at these Stoves before purchasing elsew here, a they will be sold at a discount of 'Jo nor tent, bebm llieUHual selling rstes, lor Cash. I lit Stoves mar be aeen by calling no Andrew Sites or tliennderaiijtied. JOHN W ALTON, March t. ...dAwCm. Nr.W AK TION nnd (H MISSION IIOI NK, ami Ai.hiu i ti K4t. WaHK-KooM. .'I ke aiiUscriher, kaviag ukeu the Ian; new Smre, on State St., in tbe Font Office buildups, will receive and sell si public or private sale, all or nnv oods thai may bo cnasiueed lo kirn, aed iiHitrrs nunseii tnat ov a juit and nonorahle course he mny rereive a share of public pntrmiatr. He would particularly rnll llic attention of Mnuuinclurere and deale: ia AfricuU turnl and HortiruHursI inipleruents, to this esinblishm!, aa he intends to mike it a gcaeral dpn fur the rrceptine and sate of all arm-Ire ia that line, together with Oanlen, r lower awl l-ieid veds. I be lnre will be ready for the rcreptiDM of koihIs the last week in Marrh. M-m h Il...iUVwtf. JOHN BURR. IV tTICr, 1 have placed my books, notes snd accounts 1 1 in the hand of '1 ms. Sparrow, F.so,., tor collection. All persons indebted to me are mpieited to call and settle with him. June IJ,.-twwNd. I1. SlSSON. pASII paid for Wool, at J June 10.. I. ww, WOOL WANTIUK GWVNNF.S At McMCRPIt'S.